AI Article Synopsis

  • The study analyzes the effectiveness of two signal detection algorithms (PRR and EBGM) for identifying adverse drug reactions (ADRs) in pediatric patients using data from the FDA's reporting system.
  • The analysis involved over 115,000 pediatric reports and assessed the impact of age stratification, which revealed new drug-event combinations, while age adjustment did not enhance algorithm performance.
  • The findings suggest that while both algorithms perform similarly, age stratification is beneficial in recognizing potential ADRs related to age-specific drug use, but routine age adjustment is not necessary.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Spontaneous reports of suspected adverse drug reactions (ADRs) can be analyzed to yield additional drug safety evidence for the pediatric population. Signal detection algorithms (SDAs) are required for these analyses; however, the performance of SDAs in the pediatric population specifically is unknown. We tested the performance of two SDAs on pediatric data from the US FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS) and investigated the impact of age stratification and age adjustment on the performance of SDAs.

Methods: We tested the performance of two established SDAs: the proportional reporting ratio (PRR) and the empirical Bayes geometric mean (EBGM) on a pediatric dataset from FAERS (2004-2012). We compared the performance of the SDAs with a published pediatric-specific reference set by calculating diagnostic test-related statistics, including the area under the curve (AUC) of receiver operating characteristics. Impact of age stratification and age-adjustment on the performance of the SDAs was assessed. Age adjustment was performed by pooling (Mantel-Hanszel) stratum-specific estimates.

Results: A total of 115,674 pediatric reports (patients aged 0-18 years) comprising 893,587 drug-event combinations (DECs) were analysed. Crude values of the AUC were similar for both SDAs: 0.731 (PRR) and 0.745 (EBGM). Stratification unmasked four DECs, e.g., 'ibuprofen and thrombocytopenia'. Age adjustment did not improve performance.

Conclusion: The performance of the two tested SDAs was similar in the pediatric population. Age adjustment does not improve performance and is therefore not recommended to be performed routinely. Stratification can reveal new associations, and therefore is recommended when either drug use is age-specific or when an age-specific risk is suspected.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4982893PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40264-016-0433-xDOI Listing

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