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Neuropsychological Adverse Drug Reactions to Remdesivir: Results from the WHO International Pharmacovigilance Database
journal contribution
posted on 2023-08-30, 19:03 authored by Sangbo Lee, Jae Won Yang, Se Yong Jung, Min Seo Kim, Dong Keon Yon, Seung Won Lee, Hoon-Chul Kang, Elena Dragioti, Kalthoum Tizaoui, Louis Jacob, Ai Koyanagi, Joe-Elie Salem, Karel Kostev, Ana Lascu, Jae Il Shin, Ji Hong Kim, Lee SmithOBJECTIVE: Although remdesivir (GS-5734) has recently demonstrated clinical benefits against the pandemic outbreak of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), neuropsychological adverse reactions (ADRs) remain to be examined in real-world settings. Therefore, we aimed to identify and characterize the neuropsychological ADRs associated with remdesivir use.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: We obtained data for this international pharmacovigilance cohort study from individual case safety reports (ICSRs) in a World Health Organization database (VigiBase) from the first report on remdesivir on February 17, 2020, until August 30, 2020 (n=1,403,532). ADRs reported to be relevant to remdesivir were compared with the full database by using a Bayesian neural network method to calculate the information component (IC).
RESULTS: A total of 2,107 reported cases of neuropsychological ADRs suspected to be associated with remdesivir were identified from among all ICSRs in the database during the observation period. Although 108 neuropsychological ADRs (64 neurologic events and 44 psychologic events) were reported in association with the medication, no statistically significant pharmacovigilance signal could be detected; the IC025 value was negative for all of the neuropsychological dysfunctions (anxiety [n=13, 0.62%], seizures [n=12, 0.57%], lethargy [n=6, 0.28%], agitation [n=5, 0.25%], cerebral infarction [n=3, 0.14%], ischemic stroke [n=3, 0.14%], and hemiparesis [n=3, 0.14%]).
CONCLUSIONS: Our study demonstrates that remdesivir, a novel drug applied to the treatment of COVID-19, does not have a significant association with adverse neurologic or psychiatric reactions in the real-world setting.
History
Refereed
- Yes
Volume
25Issue number
23Page range
7390-7397Publication title
European Review for Medical and Pharmacological SciencesISSN
2284-0729External DOI
Publisher
Verduci EditoreFile version
- Accepted version
Language
- eng