FormalPara Key Points
Table 1

1 Introduction

Post-marketing surveillance is crucial for monitoring a drug’s safety profile after its market approval. In the past, reporting of adverse drug reactions (ADRs) to the national agency could only be completed by healthcare professionals. Over time, the interest in reports submitted by patients or consumers has increased, as they are seen as an important source of information about ADRs [1,2,3]. Currently, many pharmacovigilance centres worldwide allow both patients and consumers and healthcare professionals to report ADRs directly to the national agency [4].

There are differences across pharmacovigilance centres in the ADR reporting process, for instance, in the manner in which people can report ADRs (e.g. via telephone, paper forms, web-based forms, mobile application), the criteria within the report form and how the reporter can answer the questions in the report form (e.g. free text, radio button, drop-down lists) [5,6,7]. In most report forms, individuals can describe the ADR experienced as free text. In the online report form of the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) in the UK (i.e. the Yellow Card scheme) [8], individuals can also select ADR terms from a list that appears after a few letters are entered in addition to having a free-text field to describe their experience. The list is made up of terms from the Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities (MedDRA®) [9]—a standardised international terminology—and selected terms can be directly transferred into the MHRA database without the need for manual coding from free text.

The use of a list to select ADRs in an online report form could thus reduce the time needed for assessors to code reported ADRs and could ease the process of reporting an ADR. However, in a small pilot study that we conducted, patients indicated they preferred to describe an ADR experienced in their own words rather than selecting a term from a list. Reasons for this preference were that they thought more accurate information could be provided using their own words when using free text and that they were concerned with the difficulty of understanding medical terms used in such a list [see Electronic Supplementary Material 1]. The latter might be resolved by using a list with patient-friendly terms. Such patient-friendly terms have been proposed for reporting tools used by patients [10]. Additionally, a qualitative study showed that the use of patient-friendly terms is an important factor for using a mobile application for ADR reporting [11]. However, for some ADRs, patients may still prefer to use their own words.

Recently, a “patient-friendly list” of MedDRA® was developed in English by the MedDRA® Maintenance and Support Services Organization and other partners of the Web-Recognising Adverse Drug Reactions (WEB-RADR) project [12]. This list includes patient-friendly terms for approximately 1400 of the lowest level terms (LLTs) from MedDRA® and is available online [13]. It contains ADR terms, using patients’ and consumers’ own texts, of the most frequently reported ADRs by individuals to pharmacovigilance centres. The patient-friendly terms list thus generally reflects the language used by individuals submitting ADR reports but is not (yet) comprehensive. Some of the terms on the list are of a technical or medical nature and might not represent the typical language some individuals would use to report that ADR. It is possible that, whilst the ADR was originally reported by a patient, another individual may have assisted and translated the ADR into more medical language for the purpose of submitting the report. Therefore, some terms on the list may still be difficult for people to understand (see the ESM 1).

In this study, we aimed to evaluate the usefulness of the currently available patient-friendly terms list for reporting ADRs by patients and consumers. More specifically, our aims were to evaluate the actual use of the patient-friendly terms list and its association with the type of ADRs reported.

2 Methods

We conducted a database study in the context of the WEB-RADR project. Data of ADRs spontaneously reported by patients and consumers through the MHRA’s Yellow Card scheme online form were used.

2.1 Procedure and Included Reports

The patient-friendly terms list developed by the MedDRA® Maintenance and Support Services Organization and other partners of the WEB-RADR project was incorporated in the patient and consumer version of the Yellow Card scheme online form (https://yellowcard.mhra.gov.uk/) on 2 August, 2017. The patient-friendly terms appear when a person enters a few letters in the text field to describe the ADR. The ADR terms that appear contain the exact entered letters; they do not include other medically related MedDRA® terms that do not contain the entered letters. For an example, see the ESM 2. ADRs selected from the patient-friendly terms list were recorded as MedDRA® LLTs in the database, whereas ADRs entered as free text were linked to MedDRA® LLTs by trained pharmacovigilance assessors.

The data for this study were extracted on 18 September, 2017. All reports received in this time period from patients and consumers were included. We assessed how many people selected an ADR from the list or entered the ADR as free text, and which MedDRA® terms were documented via both methods of ADR reporting. Use of the patient-friendly terms list was assumed when there was an exact match between the reported ADR and a term from the list, considering that the drop-down list appears when typing the first letters of a term on the list.

2.2 Analyses

Descriptive statistics were used to describe the number of received reports per reporting method, the number of ADRs at the LLT level, and the sex and age of the patients for which an ADR was reported. The association between the reporting methods and the type of reported ADRs was assessed for the ADRs of which more than 20 reports were received. Chi-squared tests or Fisher’s exact tests in the case of cells with fewer than five cases were used to test for differences between the reporting methods in the number of reports received for these ADRs. P-values < 0.05 were considered statistically significant. The analyses were conducted using Stata Version 14.2 (Stata Corp., College Station, TX, USA).

3 Results

There were 888 ADR reports received in the study period. In 69% of the reports, a female patient was involved. The age ranged from 1 to 94 years (mean: 45, standard deviation: 20). In 185 reports (21%), the patient-friendly terms list was used to enter the ADR(s). In 137 reports (15%), some ADRs were reported as free text while other ADRs were selected from the patient-friendly terms list. Reports in which the list was used concerned younger patients than the reports in which the ADRs were entered as free text (on average 37 years vs. 49 years; Table 1).

Table 1 Characteristics of the adverse drug reaction (ADR) reports

In total, the reports contained 3227 ADRs of which nausea, headache, diarrhoea, dizziness, insomnia, anxiety, depression, fatigue, tiredness, vomiting, appetite lost, joint pain, chest pain, constipation and pain were reported more than 20 times. Five of these ADRs (i.e. nausea, diarrhoea, dizziness, insomnia and constipation) were more often mentioned in reports where the ADR was selected from the patient-friendly terms list (Table 2). Pain was more often mentioned using free text (21 reports vs. 0 reports; p = 0.017). Depression was also only mentioned in reports using free text. However, this term was not included in the patient-friendly terms list. An overview of all reported ADRs at the LLT level is presented online (see the ESM 3).

Table 2 Characteristics of the adverse drug reactions (ADRs) entered as free text and selected from the patient-friendly terms list

4 Discussion

Our study shows that for the majority of the reports to a pharmacovigilance centre, people chose to describe the ADRs in their own words rather than selecting ADRs from a patient-friendly terms list. Still, one fifth of the people used the patient-friendly terms list when reporting an ADR. These patients were on average more than 10 years younger. It seems that the use of the patient-friendly terms list depends on the ADR it concerns.

Our results indicate that from a patient perspective, the free-text option to describe an ADR should be available and should not be replaced by a list for selecting ADRs. Free text provides individuals the option to use their own words. Previously, it has been shown that patients provide richer and more detailed information about ADRs in a report than healthcare professionals [14]. This suggests that information could be lost when people cannot describe the ADRs they experienced in their own words. A recent study also showed that this additional information provided by patients is important in the identification and assessment of safety signals [15]. The MHRA currently allows a hybrid approach where terms are presented in a drop-down list, but do not necessarily have to be selected. Additionally, there is a large free-text field, which allows for unstructured data and different patient preferences.

The use of a patient-friendly terms list in the ADR report form may have advantages for the handling of the reports. For instance, it is expected to save time when assessors do not need to code a description of an ADR as entered by patients and consumers to the terms provided in MedDRA®. However, guidelines about MedDRA® coding already mention the challenge of selecting the right term for professionals, where for instance a difference of one letter can impact the meaning of a symptom [16]. It is questionable whether patients and consumers will be able to make such distinctions when selecting terms from a predefined list. It is therefore important that the terms in the list are clear and unambiguous. Further studies are needed to assess the validity of reports in which ADRs are selected from a patient-friendly terms list. In particular, it should be assessed whether the terms sufficiently and correctly reflect what the patients experienced.

Our study showed that the type of ADR may influence the use of the patient-friendly terms list. It could be that for some ADRs the term is so unambiguous that more people are content to select it from a list, as we observed for nausea, diarrhoea, dizziness, insomnia and constipation. Moreover, a less specific ADR, i.e. pain, was shown to be more often reported using free text. However, other ADRs that seem unambiguous, such as headache or fatigue, were not more often selected from the list. More in-depth studies are needed to understand when individuals prefer to describe ADRs in their own words. Furthermore, we observed that reports of ADRs using the patient-friendly terms list concerned patients that were generally younger than when free text was used. We do not know whether older people had difficulties with the terms in the list or had a preference for entering the ADR as free text. A previous study showed that older people may have more trouble with drop-down lists [17]. Furthermore, older people may also experience different types of ADRs [18], which may be more difficult to select from a list. Although the person for whom an ADR is reported is not necessarily the same person as the individual sending the report (e.g. a daughter/son reporting an ADR for an elderly parent), our results suggest that more research is needed to assess the association between patient characteristics and the preference or ability to select ADRs from a patient-friendly terms list.

For more widespread use in regulatory and industry online ADR reporting portals, the patient-friendly terms list will need to evolve with the deletion of terms that are difficult to understand and the addition of terms that are more appropriate for use by patients and consumers. To date, the list has only been developed in English; however, MedDRA® is available in ten other languages, including French, Spanish, Dutch, Japanese and Chinese. The original list was derived from actual patient reports in English. Therefore, for other languages, data sources of patient-reported terms are needed to develop appropriate lists specific to those languages. It may not be appropriate to take the English list and convert it into other languages because a term that is a frequently reported and well-understood term in English may not necessarily be a “patient-friendly” or common colloquial expression in another language.

4.1 Strengths and Limitations

This study is the first in which the use of the patient-friendly terms list of MedDRA® in an ADR report form was evaluated. A limitation is that we assumed an exact match between the reported ADR and the ADR on the patient-friendly terms list as an indication of actual use of the list, while a person could still have fully typed the ADR that popped up from the list. Another limitation is that the list does not yet cover all ADRs and that there may not be a term best suited to describe the ADR. Finally, the duration of data collection, i.e. 1.5 months, may seem limited. However, 888 reports were received in this period, which is in our opinion sufficient for an explorative assessment of the use of the patient-friendly terms list.

5 Conclusion

This study shows that most individuals choose to describe the ADRs in their own words rather than selecting ADRs from a patient-friendly terms list when they report ADRs to a pharmacovigilance centre. Therefore, the patient-friendly terms list may be a useful feature for some patients or for some ADRs but it should not replace the option for individuals to describe an ADR in their own words. Future studies are needed to understand which people and which ADRs the patient-friendly terms list may be a useful feature for an ADR report form.