A proposal for developing a large patient population cohort for longterm safety monitoring in rheumatoid arthritis


Autoria(s): Lipani, JA; Strand, V; Johnson, K; Woodworth, T; Furst, D; Singh, G; Day, R; Brooks, P
Contribuinte(s)

Duncan A. Gordon

Robert D. Inman

Earl D. Silverman

Peter Lee

Data(s)

01/01/2001

Resumo

This paper proposes the creation of an objectively acquired reference database to more accurately characterize the incidence and longterm risk of relatively infrequent, but serious, adverse events. Such a database would be maintained longitudinally to provide for ongoing comparison with new rheumatologic drug safety databases collecting the occurrences and treatments of rare events, We propose the establishment of product-specific registries to prospectively follow a cohort of patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) who receive newly approved therapies. In addition, a database is required of a much larger cohort of RA patients treated with multiple second line agents of sufficient size to enable case-controlled determinations of the relative incidence of rare but serious events in the treated (registry) versus the larger disease population, The number of patients necessary for agent-specific registries and a larger patient population adequate to supply a matched case-control cohort will depend upon estimates of the detectability of an increased incidence over background. We suggest a system to carry out this proposal that will involve an umbrella organization. responsible for establishment of this large patient cohort, envisioned to be drawn from around the world.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:59268

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Journal of Rheumatology Publishing Co

Palavras-Chave #Rheumatology #Database #Surveillance #Registry #Adverse Effects #Toxicity #Safety #Methotrexate Therapy #Cyclosporine-a #Azathioprine #Disease #Cancer #Malignancies #Lymphoma #C1 #321028 Rheumatology and Arthritis #730217 Health status (e.g. indicators of well-being)
Tipo

Journal Article