WHO Drug Information Vol 19, No

WHO Drug Information Vol 19, No

WHO Drug Information Vol 19, No. 3, 2005 World Health Organization WHO Drug Information Contents Personal Perspectives Regulatory Action and News Unfinished business: clinical pharmacology Hydromorphone extended release and world health 201 suspended 217 New drug safety initiative 217 Safety and Efficacy Issues Deregistration of thioridazine 217 Transdermal fentanyl: abuse by adolescents 207 Caution on self medication 218 Safety of fentanyl transdermal patches 207 European marketing authorizations 218 Rosiglitazone: decreased high-density Tigecycline: first-in-class antibiotic approved 219 lipoprotein cholesterol 208 Ibuprofen: Stevens-Johnson syndrome 208 Essential Medicines Stringent conditions for COX-2 inhibitors 209 Highlights of the 14th Model List of Sildenafil, tadalafil and vardenafil: eye Essential Medicines 220 problems reported 209 Methadone and buprenorphine 220 Nesiritide: safety report and measures 210 Mifepristone with misoprostol 220 Mifepristone, sepsis and blood infection 211 WHO Model List of Essential Medicines 222 Mifepristone: revised safety information 211 Suicidality with SSRIs in adults 211 Ezetimibe and muscle disorders 212 Access to Medicines Pathological gambling with cabergoline 212 Intellectual property protection: impact on Icodextrin peritoneal dialysis solution: falsely public health 236 elevated blood glucose readings 213 New requirements for pseudoephedrine products 213 The International Pharmacopoeia Efalizumab: warning of thrombocytopenia 214 International Pharmacopoeia: fourth edition Antiretrovirals: HIV, hepatic impairment in development 242 and HBV/HCV 214 Recommended International Herbal Medicines Nonproprietary Names: Monograph for cultivation of herbal antimalarial: Artemisia annua 215 List 54 243 Ayurvedic medicines and heavy metals 215 National policy on regulation of herbal medicines 216 Regulatory guidelines for complementary medicines 216 199 World Health Organization WHO Drug Information Vol 19, No. 3, 2005 WHO Drug Information e-mail table of contents and subscriptions available at: http://www.who.int/druginformation 200 WHO Drug Information Vol 19, No. 3, 2005 Personal Perspectives Unfinished business: public system in developed countries but for many developing countries often exceed 30% of health clinical pharmacology budget.) However, the demand for a new lecturer and world health in molecular biology in a medical school, a new cardiologist in a teaching hospital or a further Clinical pharmacology has existed for just over 40 administrator in a health service commonly takes years and is a relative newcomer to the range of precedence over creating a position for a clinical specialties. It took its origins from the clinical pharmacologist. development of methods for the formal testing of new medicines in man – especially the rand- If clinical pharmacology has had some difficulties omized, controlled, clinical trial – and from the in making its presence felt in the developed world, major concerns about safety of medicines these have been much greater in developing catalysed particularly by the thalidomide disaster world countries where medical needs are often of the early 1960s [9]. Essentially, it is the scien- comparatively much greater but available, trained tific study of medicines in man and has developed personnel are few. its own methodological approaches ranging from single dose studies of medicines in individuals Against this background, recently revised “Aims and small groups to wider studies of medicines and Functions of the International Union of Basic use in whole populations. Among several enabling and Clinical Pharmacology (2) include . branches of the discipline are pharmacovigilance “helping in all ways the development of pharma- (the monitoring and study of the safety of medi- cology throughout the world particularly in cines), pharmacokinetics, drug metabolism, emerging countries”. The aims include “(to) pharmacoepidemiology and more recently, improve and harmonize the teaching of rational pharmacoeconomics. Many collaborative partner- use of drugs . particularly in developing ships have been forged with pharmacists, analyti- countries” and “(to) improve the utilization cal chemists, statisticians, other clinicians and, of clinical pharmacological services in health care more recently, epidemiologists and health econo- delivery, particularly in developing countries. .” mists, in developing these themes. Developing-developed world As a new discipline clinical pharmacology has had collaboration in clinical to fight for recognition, both in medical schools but also in the wider world of health care delivery. pharmacology This is perhaps surprising when one of the main Distance and the lack of easy communication tasks of any physician is the safe and effective militated against collaborative work between prescription of medicines, and of any health developed and developing countries for many service to ensure the availability of medicines of years. An exception was the work of D.R. high quality, safety and efficacy to be used in the Laurence, a pioneer clinical pharmacologist from most cost-effective manner. (Costs of medicines the United Kingdom who worked over several may be 10% of total healthcare spending in the years with colleagues from Bombay (now Mumbai), India to determine the safe and effec- tive dose of tetanus antitoxin for the treatment of Article adapted from the IUPHAR Clinical Pharmacology this (now largely preventable) disease. Their lecture of the same title given at the 8th World Congress conclusions in 1968 were that “in the treatment of of Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Brisbane, tetanus 10 000 IU (international units) of equine Australia, August 2004. It appeared in: International Journal of Risk & Safety in Medicine, 17: 65–71 (2005) antitoxin is about as effective as 200 000 IU” [14]. authored by Anthony J. Smith, Department of Clinical Pharmacology, University of Newcastle and WHO Remarkably, this was the first systematic attempt Collaborating Centre for Training in Pharmaco-econom- to define a rational dose of antitoxin but it also ics and Rational Pharmacotherapy, Australia. established that inter-country collaborations on 201 Personal Perspectives WHO Drug Information Vol 19, No. 3, 2005 matters of importance to public health were and clinical pharmacologists in several developing possible and could yield answers which reduced countries. The results are applicable to both the cost of provision of services in the public developed and developing communities [1]. sector, in this case by a factor of 20. Clinical toxicology has often been a neglected In the late 1960s and throughout the 1970s a area of research. Here again recent inter-country trickle of young trainees from developing coun- collaborations have advanced knowledge – for tries was funded to work in clinical pharmacology example, the Oxford–Colombo research unit units in Europe and the USA. In retrospect, the working on the management of poisoning both unawareness of many of the host departments of with organophosphate insecticides (estimated to the needs of the developing country, and the kill 200 000 people worldwide each year ) and immaturity of the discipline itself often meant that with Oleander species – plants often taken with their training was not tailored to real needs. For suicidal intent in Sri Lanka and containing instance, acquiring skills in the measurement of glycosides with a digoxin-like cardiotoxic effect small amounts of medicines in blood samples was which, untreated, may be rapidly fatal [7]. not relevant for a trainee going back to a country which had difficulty in providing even essential Recently several centres of clinical pharmacology medicines to the poorest of its people let alone have developed collaborative programs concen- setting up a sophisticated analytical facility in trating on training in rational medicines use. which the trainee could practice his new-found Examples include the current Egypt–Denmark– techniques. This lack of congruence between Sweden collaboration on rational prescribing and training and career prospects often led to disillu- Spanish initiatives linking clinical pharmacology sion and migration of the trainee either back to training into the health care systems of Central the laboratories of the developed world or into a and South American countries. different clinical specialty at home. Applying research lessons to the The advent of the Internet coupled with easier use of medicines in the health care travel has transformed the possibilities for collaboration between developed and developing system countries and there are many examples of partnerships producing important research Are the newly-won lessons coming from the findings of direct benefit to both partners. Malaria developed-developing research partnerships remains one of the most perplexing tropical having an impact on health services? The diseases and the long-standing collaboration evidence obtained is “necessary but not sufficient” between Oxford University and the research to ensure its translation into health policy and group in Mahidol University in Thailand is a good delivery of health care but there are pointers to example of a better approach to research into ways in which this might be done. issues of safe and effective treatment [16]. A simple but relevant study of the efficacy and Experience gained in Australia over the past 13 safety of rectal artesunate compared with quinine years shows that the role of the clinical pharma- in the

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