Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03029897

E-reporting of Adverse Drug Reactions by Patients in Relapsing-remitting Multiple Sclerosis

Impact of E-reporting by Patients With Relapsing-remitting Multiple Sclerosis on the Reporting of Adverse Drug Reactions in France: a Randomized Controlled Trial.

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
161 (actual)
Sponsor
University Hospital, Caen · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Adverse drug reactions are collected exhaustively during the experimental development phase of the drug, but the trial population is not representative. In post-marketing authorization, the use in the real life of medicines requires to specify the profile of adverse effects through pharmacovigilance. However, in clinical practice, under-reporting of adverse drug reactions prevents a satisfactory knowledge of the risks. For example, in the multiple sclerosis (MS) patients population in 2015, only 1 case of congestive flushing was reported by physicians, none by patients, for approximately 7,800 patients treated with Tecfidera® dimethyl-fumarate, while trials reported 39% of flush. The investigators propose a study measuring the impact of the deployment of e-reporting to patients in a population suffering from multiple sclerosis in initiation of first line drug therapy. The study design will be a randomized controlled trial. Twenty-four direct or indirect partner centers of the OFSEP will be randomized in 2 arms (1 standard arm without intervention, and one interventional arm), Each arm including 6 CHU, 3 CHG and 3 liberal neurologists. CHUs will include 10 patients in 6 months, and CHGs and liberal neurologists 5 patients, a total of 180 patients will be included. The expected duration of this study is 12 months, 6 months of inclusion of patients, and one 6-month follow-up period for each patient. At 1 month (+/- 15 days) of the follow-up period of each patient, a questionnaire will be made by telephone call to each patient. The study is part of the pharmacovigilance system in place in France and aims to improve its efficiency by increasing declarations and therefore earlier detection of signals in order to prevent and minimize risks. The comparison of the two arms should make it possible to decide on the usefulness of national support for e-reporting, while respecting a good integration with the French pharmacovigilance system.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERMy eReport Francepatients are educated to the use of "My eReport France" application

Timeline

Start date
2017-05-05
Primary completion
2019-04-24
Completion
2019-04-24
First posted
2017-01-24
Last updated
2019-07-02

Locations

1 site across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03029897. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.