A
small effort could make a big difference in child drug
safety
By Terry
Klassen
Expert
Advisor
EvidenceNetwork.ca and Martin Offringa Professor of Paediatrics University of Toronto |
WINNIPEG,
MB and TORONTO, ON/ Troy Media/ - Almost a year has passed since an important
report was released on ways Canada can improve medicines for
children.
The
report was commissioned, by Health Canada and undertaken by the Council of
Canadian Academies, after experts sounded alarms because there wasn't enough
knowledge on possible side-effects of certain medications.
The truth
is one that is rarely declared publicly: Canadian children are often treated
with drugs in the absence of evidence.
What
the report, Improving Medicines for Children
in Canada, confirmed was what pediatricians in the field already
know - that much of the medications given to children in Canada have never been
adequately studied, or even formally approved for the conditions they are
commonly prescribed to treat.
The
report also noted that children respond to medications differently from adults,
which means that medicines must be both studied in children and formulated for
children. The good news is that there are precedents. In the United States and
the European Union, pediatric medicines research is encouraged, required, and
monitored in ways that offer lessons for Canada.
What such
precedents teach us is that studying medicines in children is always possible
and is in their best interests. The report rightly emphasizes that pediatric
medicines research is a Canadian strength, but it requires reinforcement and
sustained capacity and infrastructure to realize its full
potential.
Unfortunately, little has been done since this landmark
report.
Although
the report flags the fact that Canada is uniquely positioned to engage in
collaborative disease-specific networks that have been established
internationally; this first critical step still needs to be taken. To do this,
we need our federal government to help us set this in motion by working with
Health Canada, provincial counterparts, universities, and children's hospitals
to implement a proposed national network for the study of medicines in
children.
What
would this mean for Canadian kids?
A
Canadian network working in collaboration with global partners could support
rapid delivery of studies on new children's medicines that we cannot deliver
alone, and bring medicines for children to market more quickly. It would also
allow critical Canadian participation in global health, economic, and other
international studies so that pharmaceutical pricing can reflect needs in our
country.
The
wheels are in motion. The Canadian government is studying a comprehensive
proposal for a child health drug research network prepared by the joint
children's hospitals in our country - a unique Canadian development in which
child health leaders choose to collaborate rather than compete. At the same
time, international pharmaceutical companies are promoting a plan to develop a
Global Pediatric Clinical Trials Network involving national networks of the best
children's hospitals in more than 20 countries in the world.
Instead
of a single children's hospital building up a local or provincial infrastructure
to answer one drug research question at a time, then breaking it down; Canada
would benefit immensely from a sustainable network, taking on multiple
questions, working with multiple partners, led by Canada's reputable clinicians
and scientists.
Of
course, whichever way we move forward, the child and family should be put first
for all decisions made. This will guarantee that only ethical, relevant research
proposals are adopted by the network.
Can we
really afford not to be part of this global development and miss having our
national infrastructure organized? It's time Health Canada made progress on the
recommendations of a report that they, themselves, commissioned - and for the
federal government to set the course.
As the
report stipulates, only a small investment is needed to align existing resources
and send a strong international signal. If we don't, Canada will lose its
competitive advantage to engage pharmaceutical companies. Worse, Canadian
families will be at further risk of failing to benefit from emerging scientific
breakthroughs.
Terry P.
Klassen is an adviser with EvidenceNetwork.ca, a pediatric emergency physician
and clinical epidemiologist. He is CEO and Scientific Director of the Children's
Hospital Research Institute of Manitoba and Head of Pediatrics, University of
Manitoba. Martin Offringa is a Professor of Paediatrics at the University of
Toronto, a practising neonatologist and a Senior Scientist in Child Health
Evaluative Sciences at The Hospital for Sick Children. Both authors served, with
many others, as experts on the Council of Canadian Academies committee that
looked into Therapeutic Products in
Children.
© 2015
Distributed by
Troy
Media
|
No comments:
Post a Comment
id="blogfeeds"><$BlogFeedsVertical$>
id="postfeeds"><$BlogItemFeedLinks$>