Influence of drug safety advisories on drug utilisation: an international interrupted time series and meta-analysis

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Influence of drug safety advisories on drug utilisation: an international interrupted time series and meta-analysis

Safety Advisories Framework for Effective Risk-communication logoMorrow RL, Mintzes B, Souverein PC, et al. Influence of drug safety advisories on drug utilisation: an international interrupted time series and meta-analysis. 

Abstract

Objective: To evaluate the association between regulatory drug safety advisories and changes in drug utilisation.

Design: We conducted controlled, interrupted times series analyses with administrative prescription claims data to estimate changes in drug utilisation following advisories. We used random-effects meta-analysis with inverse-variance weighting to estimate the average post-advisory change in drug utilisation across advisories.

Study population: We included advisories issued in Canada, Denmark, the UK and the USA during 2009–2015, mainly concerning drugs in common use in primary care. We excluded advisories related to over-the-counter drugs, drug-drug interactions, vaccines, drugs used primarily in hospital and advisories with co-interventions within ±6 months.

Main outcome measures: Change in drug utilisation, defined as actual versus predicted percentage change in the number of prescriptions (for advisories without dose-related advice), or in the number of defined daily doses (for dose-related advisories), per 100 000 population.

Results: Among advisories without dose-related advice (n=20), the average change in drug utilisation was −5.83% (95% CI −10.93 to –0.73; p=0.03). Advisories with dose-related advice (n=4) were not associated with a statistically significant change in drug utilisation (−1.93%; 95% CI −17.10 to 13.23; p=0.80). In a post hoc subgroup analysis of advisories without dose-related advice, we observed no statistically significant difference between the change in drug utilisation following advisories with explicit prescribing advice, such as a recommendation to consider the risk of a drug when prescribing, and the change in drug utilisation following advisories without such advice.

Conclusions: Among safety advisories issued on a wide range of drugs during 2009–2015 in 4 countries (Canada, Denmark, the UK and the USA), the association of advisories with changes in drug utilisation was variable, and the average association was modest.

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