Pharmacovigilance (PV)

What is Pharmacovigilance?

Pharmacovigilance (PV) is the science and set of activities related to the detection, assessment, understanding, and prevention of adverse effects or any other drug-related problems.

Its primary goal is to improve patient safety and ensure that the benefits of a medicinal product outweigh its risks throughout its lifecycle — from clinical development through post-marketing.

Pharmacovigilance is both a regulatory requirement and a public health priority, with systems and processes in place globally to monitor the safety of medicinal products in real time.

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Why it Matters in Pharma Today

  • Regulatory compliance — Required by global health authorities for all marketed products, with defined processes for reporting and evaluation.
  • Patient safety — Enables rapid identification and mitigation of emerging safety risks.
  • Evidence-based decisions — Provides data to inform labeling updates, risk minimisation measures, and benefit–risk assessments.
  • Global harmonisation — Aligns safety monitoring practices through international standards (ICH E2 series, WHO Uppsala Monitoring Centre).
  • Data integration — PV data feeds directly into labeling governance (CCDS, SmPC, USPI, ePI) in structured content workflows.

Global Landscape

Region/BodyGoverning EntityAdoption Status / Timeline
GlobalWHO Uppsala Monitoring Centre (UMC)Maintains VigiBase, the global database of individual case safety reports (ICSRs).
EUEMA & National Competent AuthoritiesGoverned by Good Pharmacovigilance Practices (GVP) modules.
USFDA (CDER & CBER)Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS) for marketed drugs and biologics.
JapanPMDAMaintains national pharmacovigilance database; aligns with ICH standards.

How Pharmacovigilance Works in a Component-Based Authoring Model

Detect — Identify potential safety issues through adverse event reports, literature monitoring, signal detection tools, and ongoing clinical trial surveillance.

Assess — Evaluate the causality, frequency, and severity of identified risks.

Understand — Integrate safety data with clinical and product information to assess the overall benefit–risk profile.

Prevent — Implement risk minimisation actions, including labeling changes, safety communications, or product withdrawal if necessary.

Propagate changes — Update CCDS, SmPC, USPI, ePI, and other documents using structured content to ensure consistency across all outputs.

Example: PV in Practice

  • New drug–drug interaction detected → PV team updates CCDS → triggers updates to SmPC Section 4.5 and USPI Section 7 → regulatory submissions made to all affected markets.
  • Unexpected adverse event in post-market use → PV signal assessment recommends boxed warning → labeling updates implemented globally.

Pharmacovigilance Top FAQs

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