CRIX, Pfizer, Partners HealthCare and CDISC Exploring Ways to Improve Patient Safety
CRIX’s New Service Will Leverage Electronic Medical Records and Enable Easier and More Accurate Reporting of Adverse Drug Events
RESTON, Va.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The Clinical Research Information eXchange (CRIX) International today announced their participation with Pfizer, Partners HealthCare and the Clinical Data Interchange Standards Consortium (CDISC) in the ASTER (Adverse Drug Event Spontaneous Triggered Electronic Reporting) study, which is exploring ways to improve the current spontaneous reporting system (SRS), the primary source of information for adverse drug events. The ASTER study is exploring how a combination of standards, technology and a new business model can improve drug safety by helping physicians better recognize and report adverse events, and by improving the quality of data in safety reports.
“Working collaboratively with Partners HealthCare and CDISC through CRIX, we are exploring innovative methods to improve the information flow about patient experiences with medicines. The goal is to advance the quality of data relating to benefits and risks of medicines, thereby giving physicians and patients better treatment options”
The healthcare industry has long understood the need for computerized monitoring and technologies that ease – or automate – reporting of adverse medical reactions.
“Analyzing data on adverse events is only effective if the data is accurate and complete, which is not always the case with the current SRS,” said James Bland, Executive Director of CRIX International. “By making the reporting system easier and broadening the pool of reporters, we will create a database that will vastly improve the system.”
The study is using CDISC’s Retrieve Form for Data Capture (RFD) standard to automatically recognize adverse drug events recorded in the Longitudinal Medical Record (LMR), an electronic health record system currently in use at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Massachusetts General Hospital, founding members of Partners HealthCare. The system will automatically populate an ADE report from the LMR thereby eliminating the burden of transcribing data from one system to another.
An essential part of the study is to pilot a new business model for safety reporting which uses CRIX International to provide the data collection, processing and reporting services. CRIX will be able to receive the ADE reports directly from Partners HealthCare and will forward them electronically to FDA and to drug manufacturers. This will result in a time from recognition of the event until FDA receives the report of a matter of minutes. The project will run through 2009 pending quarterly performance benchmarks.
“Working collaboratively with Partners HealthCare and CDISC through CRIX, we are exploring innovative methods to improve the information flow about patient experiences with medicines. The goal is to advance the quality of data relating to benefits and risks of medicines, thereby giving physicians and patients better treatment options,” said Michael Ibara, Pfizer’s Head of Pharmacovigilance Information Management.
“This project has the potential to greatly improve patient safety by streamlining adverse drug event reporting for all healthcare organizations while closely guarding patient privacy,” said Jeffrey A. Linder, MD, MPH, Assistant Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Principle Investigator of the ASTER study.
CDISC’s work on SRS is an extension of work begun with Integrating the Healthcare Enterprise (IHE), Health Level 7 (HL7) and The Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society (HiMSS), three of the leading healthcare industry organizations.
About CRIX International
CRIX (Clinical Research Information eXchange) International was founded in December 2006 to develop products and services that would accelerate and streamline the interaction between sponsors of new drug products, their business partners, research institutions, academia, and health authorities involved in bringing new therapies to patients throughout the world. It is headquartered in Reston, Virginia, USA. For more information, please visit http://www.crixinternational.org.
About Pfizer
Pfizer discovers and develops innovative medicines to treat and help prevent disease for both people and animals. We also partner with healthcare providers, governments and local communities around the world to expand access to our medicines and to provide better quality healthcare and health system support.
About CDISC
CDISC is a global, open, multidisciplinary, non-profit organization that has established standards to support the acquisition, exchange, submission and archive of clinical research data and metadata. The CDISC mission is to develop and support global, platform-independent data standards that enable information system interoperability to improve medical research and related areas of healthcare. CDISC standards are vendor-neutral, platform-independent and freely available via the CDISC website.
CDISC is made possible through the generous support of its members, sponsors, and volunteer participants. These include academia, biopharmaceutical companies, technology and service providers, institutional review boards and anyone interested in streamlining biopharmaceutical product development and improving clinical data quality and healthcare. CDISC also has joint memberships with HL7, HIMSS, AMIA and the C-Path Institute. Additional information on CDISC can be found on the CDISC website at www.cdisc.org.
