Improving Data Collection in Pregnancy Safety Studies: Towards Standardisation of Data Elements in Pregnancy Reports from Public and Private Partners, A Contribution from the ConcePTION Project.

Details

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State: Public
Version: Final published version
License: CC BY-NC 4.0
Serval ID
serval:BIB_C5487C3C03C0
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Improving Data Collection in Pregnancy Safety Studies: Towards Standardisation of Data Elements in Pregnancy Reports from Public and Private Partners, A Contribution from the ConcePTION Project.
Journal
Drug safety
Author(s)
Favre G., Richardson J.L., Moore A., Geissbühler Y., Jehl V., Oliver A., Shechtman S., Diav-Citrin O., Berlin M., De Haan T., Baud D., Panchaud A., Mor A., Sabidó M., de Souza S., Chambers C., van Rijt-Weetink YRJ, van Puijenbroek E.P., Yates L.M., Girardin F., Stellfeld M., Winterfeld U.
ISSN
1179-1942 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0114-5916
Publication state
Published
Issued date
03/2024
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
47
Number
3
Pages
227-236
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
The ConcePTION project aims to improve the way medication use during pregnancy is studied. This includes exploring the possibility of developing a distributed data processing and analysis infrastructure using a common data model that could form a foundational platform for future surveillance and research. A prerequisite would be that data from various data access providers (DAPs) can be harmonised according to an agreed set of standard rules concerning the structure and content of the data. To do so, a reference framework of core data elements (CDEs) recommended for primary data studies on drug safety during pregnancy was previously developed. The aim of this study was to assess the ability of several public and private DAPs using different primary data sources focusing on multiple sclerosis, as a pilot, to map their respective data variables and definitions with the CDE recommendations framework.
Four pregnancy registries (Gilenya, Novartis; Aubagio, Sanofi; the Organization of Teratology Information Specialists [OTIS]; Aubagio, Sanofi; the Dutch Pregnancy Drug Register, Lareb), two enhanced pharmacovigilance programmes (Gilenya PRIM, Novartis; MAPLE-MS, Merck Healthcare KGaA) and four Teratology Information Services (UK TIS, Jerusalem TIS, Zerifin TIS, Swiss TIS) participated in the study. The ConcePTION primary data source CDE includes 51 items covering administrative functions, the description of pregnancy, maternal medical history, maternal illnesses arising in pregnancy, delivery details, and pregnancy and infant outcomes. For each variable in the CDE, the DAPs identified whether their variables were: identical to the one mentioned in the CDE; derived; similar but with a divergent definition; or not available.
The majority of the DAP data variables were either directly taken (85%, n = 305/357, range 73-94% between DAPs) or derived by combining different variables (12%, n = 42/357, range 0-24% between DAPs) to conform to the CDE variables and definitions. For very few of the DAP variables, alignment with the CDE items was not possible, either because of divergent definitions (1%, n = 3/357, range 0-2% between DAPs) or because the variables were not available (2%, n = 7/357, range 0-4% between DAPs).
Data access providers participating in this study presented a very high proportion of variables matching the CDE items, indicating that alignment of definitions and harmonisation of data analysis by different stakeholders to accelerate and strengthen pregnancy pharmacovigilance safety data analyses could be feasible.
Keywords
Pregnancy, Female, Humans, Fingolimod Hydrochloride, Data Collection, Registries, Crotonates, Hydroxybutyrates, Nitriles, Toluidines
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Funding(s)
University of Lausanne
Create date
21/12/2023 14:05
Last modification date
27/02/2024 8:17
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