Inconsistent country-wide reporting of adverse drug reactions to antimicrobials in Sierra Leone (2017–2021): A wake-up call to improve reporting
Date
2022-03-10
Authors
Thomas, Fawzi
Abiri, Onome T.
Komeh, James P.
Conteh, Thomas A.
Bah, Abdulai Jawo
Kanu, Joseph Sam
Terry, Robert
Abrahamyan, Arpine
Thekkur, Pruthu
Zachariah, Rony
Citation
Thomas, F., Abiri, O.T., Komeh, J.P., Conteh, T.A., Bah, A.J., Kanu, J.S., Terry, R., Abrahamyan, A., Thekkur, P. and Zachariah, R. (2022) ‘Inconsistent country-wide reporting of adverse drug reactions to antimicrobials in Sierra Leone (2017–2021): a wake-up call to improve reporting’, International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(6), p. 3264. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19063264.
Abstract
Background: Monitoring of adverse drug reactions (ADRs) to antimicrobials is important, as they can cause life-threatening illness, permanent disabilities, and death. We assessed country-wide ADR reporting on antimicrobials and their outcomes. Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted using individual case safety reports (ICSRs) entered into the national pharmacovigilance database (VigiFlow) during 2017−2021. Results: Of 566 ICSRs, inconsistent reporting was seen, with the highest reporting in 2017 and 2019 (mass drug campaigns for deworming), zero reporting in 2018 (reasons unknown), and only a handful in 2020 and 2021 (since COVID-19). Of 566 ICSRs, 90% were for antiparasitics (actively reported during mass campaigns), while the rest (passive reporting from health facilities) included 8% antibiotics, 7% antivirals, and 0.2% antifungals. In total, 90% of the reports took >30 days to be entered (median = 165; range 2−420 days), while 44% had 75% of all variables filled in (desired target = 100%). There were 10 serious ADRs, 18 drug withdrawals, and 60% of ADRs affected the gastrointestinal system. The patient outcomes (N-566) were: recovered (59.5%), recovering (35.5%), not recovered (1.4%), death (0.2%), and unknown (3.4%). There was no final ascertainment of ‘recovering’ outcomes. Conclusions: ADR reporting is inconsistent, with delays and incomplete data. This is a wake-up call for introducing active reporting and setting performance targets.