Assessing the benefit-risk balance of drugs. Some lessons from the COVID pandemic.

Assessing the benefit-risk balance of drugs. Some lessons from the COVID pandemic.

Publication date: Aug 01, 2024

Drug efficacy and effectiveness are assessed respectively through clinical trials and pharmaco-epidemiological studies. However, relative and absolute benefits of drugs are distinct measures that must be considered in relation to the baseline risk of disease incidence, complication or progression. On the other hand, adverse drug reactions are independent of the basic risk but depend on the characteristics of the population treated. Given these prerequisites, how can we balance the benefits and risks of drugs? We use the example of therapeutics evaluated during Covid to describe how assessing the benefit-risk balance of drugs is a complex process. Clinical trials are not designed to identify rare adverse events, underscoring the necessity for a pharmacovigilance system. Evaluating the balance between the benefits and risks of drugs is an ongoing process, demanding the simultaneous analysis of data from clinical trials, potential drug-drug interactions, pharmacovigilance monitoring and pharmaco-epidemiological studies, to identify potential safety concerns. In addition, pharmacologists must play a major role in educating the general public about drugs, aiding in the accurate interpretation of the benefit-risk balance and preventing misinformation.

Concepts Keywords
Covid Benefit-risk assessment
Expert Covid
Pandemic COVID-19
Pharmacologists COVID-19 Drug Treatment
Therapeutics drug adverse reaction
Drug Interactions
drug-drug interaction
effectiveness
efficacy
Humans
pharmacology
Pharmacovigilance
Risk Assessment

Semantics

Type Source Name
drug DRUGBANK Isoxaflutole
disease VO effectiveness
disease MESH adverse drug reactions
disease VO population
disease IDO process
disease MESH drug interactions
disease MESH COVID-19

Original Article

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