New Research Finds New Data-driven Approaches Would Improve How FDA Monitors Safety of Approved Existing Drugs

New Study Key Takeaways:

  • The current approaches to monitoring FDA drugs post-market suffer critical drawbacks.
  • Using robust data-driven approaches the FDA can identify adverse effects of drugs in a more timely and reliable manner.
  • This method can improve the regulatory decision-making process and enhance public safety.
  • The researchers prove their point by analyzing post-market concerns of a diabetes drug that got issued a black box warning.

 

CATONSVILLE, MD, October 14, 2021 – New research in the INFORMS journal Management Science finds that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) could enhance public safety by employing new, robust data-driven approaches to identify adverse effects of drugs faster and more reliably, which would improve the regulatory decision-making and oversight processes. This approach would substantially contrast with the current FDA approaches for monitoring drug safety, which suffers major drawbacks, e.g., that they are based on voluntary reports that can result in inaccurate or untimely decisions. 

The study, “Enhancing Regulatory Decision-making for Post-market Drug Safety,” applies this approach to a highly publicized FDA black box warning (BBW) for a drug used to treat diabetes.

In May 2007, the FDA issued a safety alert for the anti-diabetes medication rosiglitazone, followed by a black box warning soon thereafter. The alert was issued on the same day the New England Journal of Medicine(NEJM) published an article reporting that rosiglitazone use is associated with a 64% increase in the risk of cardiovascular (CV) mortality and 43% increase in the risk of heart attack. However, subsequent studies were skeptical of the FDA decision to issue a BBW and questioned the validity of methods employed in the NEJM study.

“Using comprehensive data from the Veterans Health Administration on over 300,000 diabetes patients, we find that rosiglitazone was not associated with CV mortality or an increased risk of heart attack,” says Vishal Ahuja, one of the study authors, from Southern Methodist University. “This is a conclusion that the FDA also reached as it retracted the BBW six years after issuing it.”

Ahuja, alongside his fellow researchers, Carlos Alvarez of Texas Tech University, and John Birge and Chad Syverson both of the University of Chicago, emphasizes that this paper demonstrates the importance of using real-world data to support regulatory decision-making. This is consistent with the mandate of the 21st Century Cures Act, passed by U.S. Congress in 2016.

“The use of robust analytical methods that rely on large, reliable and relevant observational databases is critical to improving the timeliness and accuracy of FDA’s decisions and allow it to perform a proactive holistic assessment of drugs,” concludes Ahuja.

  

Link to full study.

 

About INFORMS and Management Science

Management Science is a premier peer-reviewed scholarly journal focused on research using quantitative approaches to study all aspects of management in companies and organizations. It is published by INFORMS, the leading international association for operations research and analytics professionals. More information is available at www.informs.org or @informs.

 

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Contact:

Ashley Smith

443-757-3578

[email protected]

New Research Finds New Data-driven Approaches Would Improve How FDA Monitors Safety of Approved Existing Drugs

Media Contact

Ashley Smith
Public Affairs Coordinator
INFORMS
Catonsville, MD
[email protected]
443-757-3578

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