Litcius/Paper detail

Electronic Reporting Systems in Pharmacovigilance: The Implementation of VigiFlow in Brazil

Marcelo Vogler, Heloísa Ricci Conesa, Karla de Araújo Ferreira, Felipe Mendes da Cruz, Fernanda Simioni Gasparotto, Karen Fleck, Fernanda Rebelo, Bianca Kollross, Yannie Silveira Gonçalves

2020Pharmaceutical Medicine27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Pharmacovigilance is defined by the World Health Organization as the science and practice related to the detection, assessment, understanding and prevention of adverse drug reactions (ADRs). In a well-functioning pharmacovigilance system, information on possible ADRs is collected from patients, health professionals and marketing authorisation holders. Of all data sources for drug safety monitoring, spontaneous reporting systems provide the highest volume of information at the lowest maintenance cost and have proven their value in the early detection of product-related safety issues. At the beginning of 2018, the Brazilian Health Regulatory Agency (Agência Nacional de Vigilância Sanitária-Anvisa) decided to replace the national electronic reporting system in Brazil (Notivisa) with the system provided by Uppsala Monitoring Centre (VigiFlow) for ADR reporting. This paper describes that process and reports on the progress made by Anvisa in terms of making Brazil compliant with international pharmacovigilance standards as well as significantly increasing the number of individual case safety reports collected.

Topics & Concepts

PharmacovigilanceAgency (philosophy)AuthorizationMedicineMarketing authorizationHealth surveillanceSummary of Product CharacteristicsBusinessProduct (mathematics)Drug reactionPostmarketing surveillanceEuropean unionMedical emergencyEnvironmental healthDrugPharmacologyAdverse effectComputer scienceComputer securityEconomic policyEpistemologyPhilosophyMathematicsGeometryBioinformaticsBiologyPharmacovigilance and Adverse Drug ReactionsDrug-Induced Adverse ReactionsPharmaceutical Economics and Policy