key: cord-0004391-lp63i56o authors: Sofat, Reecha; Cremers, Serge; Ferner, R.E. title: Drug and therapeutics committees as guardians of safe and rational medicines use date: 2019-10-18 journal: Br J Clin Pharmacol DOI: 10.1111/bcp.14088 sha: 5a34bd8d2b843fa9a95f275b5892e1fb76ef75d3 doc_id: 4391 cord_uid: lp63i56o nan Secondly, the BNF gives information on guidance from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE), but only after the guidance has been formulated. This can take months or years from the time a medicine is licensed. 1 Yet, and for clear reasons, pharmaceutical companies are likely to encourage early adoption of novel agents. This explains in part, for example, the very large numbers of patients exposed to rofecoxib (Vioxx) in the 5 years from licensing to withdrawal. 2 The time has passed when every practitioner was free to practice medicine in whatever way he or she chose. Some unlicensed or offlabel prescribing is supported by strong evidence of efficacy or at least by wide adoption. Someone, though, has to sanction the use of medicines outside their licensed indications. For paediatric practice, the BNF for Children (BNF-C) covers much of the likely unlicensed prescribing, from acetazolamide ("Not licensed for the treatment of glaucoma") to zolmitriptan ("not licensed for use in children"). For off-label or unlicensed use of medicines outside the recommendations of BNF and BNF-C, health care organizations and practitioners are at risk unless the reasons for use are logical and the appropriate safeguards are in place. Pharmaceutical companies owe a duty to their shareholders to make profits. They do this by selling medicines that are already licensed and by undertaking research on novel drugs. It is uncertain whether companies spend more on research than on marketing. 3 It is clear that substantial sums are spent on marketing: $17 700m on medical marketing in 1997, which rose to $20 900m in 2016. 4 Marketing is not always constrained by ethics or self-regulation: between 2003 and 2012, there were 74 cases of off-label promotion in the United Kingdom, and 43 companies were ruled in breach of the relevant regulation at least once. 5 It is also clear that prescribers are influenced by such marketing. A study in the United States found that "Gifts from DOI: 10.1111/bcp.14088 wileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/bcp pharmaceutical companies are associated with more prescriptions per patient, more costly prescriptions, and a higher proportion of branded prescriptions with variation across specialties. Gifts of any size had an effect and larger gifts elicited a larger impact on prescribing behaviors." 6 The favoured solution to the problems outlined above is to control prescribing in the local environment through a committee, variously called a medicines committee, a drug and therapeutics committee, a prescribing and medicines committee, or something similar. The committee's role may vary from one health care organization to another. Briefly, the committee would concern itself with the rules and regulations governing the use of drugs in its organization, publish a list of permitted medicines based on efficacy, safety, tolerability and cost, consider any restrictions on their use, and supervise the addition and removal of medicines from the list. [7] [8] [9] When it comes to new or off-label medicines, the committee can help protect patients from poorly founded claims for new medicines, and the organization from the financial burden of a medicine with only marginal benefits but substantially higher costs. An additional task is to guide the judicious use of drugs locally through extensions to the committee's main roles, for example, through antibiotic stewardship, management of demand for intravenous immunoglobulin, and oversight of the switch from originators to biosimilars. The role of formulary committees is evolving. Bodies such as NICE in the United Kingdom now evaluate the evidence for new treatments and make judgements of cost-effectiveness at a national level. NICE guidelines influence, and its Technology Appraisals mandate, the adoption of recommended treatments in both primary and secondary health care. This relieves local committees of the duty to judge medicines considered in a Technology Appraisal. Regional Medicines Optimisation Committees (RMOC), established in England and Wales in 2017, 10 aim to provide a single strategic medicines optimization system for England, taking on many of the tasks that currently fall to local formulary committees; this aim has not yet been realized, although the process is still in evolution. Local committees have adapted to these changes but continue to face their own substantial challenges. The Early Access to Medicines evidence of efficacy is often lacking, yet access to a medicine can falsely raise expectations; secondly, data on outcomes are not systematically collected, so that information that would help to assess the true value of a drug is lost; and thirdly, the cost of giving early access and potential market share to some drugs is recouped by the pharmaceutical industry after the drug is licensed and the NHS pays the cost. High-cost drugs with little or no evidence on safety or efficacy pose similar problems. Individual funding requests made to NHS authorities for exceptional patients who do not fit into a standard evidence-based cohort are often denied. Trials on such small groups of individuals will not be possible, but grouped in an observational setting, large treatment effects can inform clinical decisions, and if data are appropriately harnessed with ethical approval, they can also begin to inform the biology of rare and refractory diseases. Formulary committees with an allied research arm could then have an enhanced datagathering role embedded into routine care, working effectively as an NHS network for both drug discovery and repurposing, with shorter implementation times. The role of the drug and therapeutics committee continues to evolve. Now NICE has been established for 20 years, the committee has been largely relieved of the burden of making complex assessments of the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of newly licensed drugs; regional medicines optimization committees may also remove some of the decisions from local committees. However, there are continued and evolving challenges to ensuring the safe, effective, and cost-effective use of medicines within a single health care facility, and the drug and therapeutics committee needs to continue and to evolve to meet them. Clinical pharmacologists have specific knowledge and skills to guide rational therapeutics and improve patient care. As a result, they commonly participate in committees responsible for overseeing the use of medicines in health care organizations, often called drugs and therapeutics committees (DTCs) in the United Kingdom and pharmacy and therapeutics committees in the United States. This editorial describes some important aspects of DTCs and how a changing landscape creates both challenges and opportunities. It introduces a BJCP series called "Drugs and Therapeutics Committees" to allow clinical pharmacologists and those participating in DTCs to share data and practices on how best to contribute to DTCs and to adapt to the changing landscape. We encourage contributions from all over the globe so that we can learn and share good practice. We hope to publish articles on topics such as the management of high-cost drugs and how this is applied to individual funding requests; how DTCs manage off-label use of drugs; the relationship between the DTC and the pharmaceutical industry; and how to manage n-of-1 studies. The first contribution to the series describes an approach to the successful introduction of biosimilars. Merck withdraws arthritis drug worldwide Pharmaceutical company spending on research and development and promotion in Canada Pharmaceutical industry off-label promotion and self-regulation: a document analysis of off-label promotion rulings by the United Kingdom prescription medicines code of practice authority 2003-2012 Influence of pharmaceutical marketing on Medicare prescriptions in the District of Columbia Medical Marketing in the United States The hospital formulary system-1965. l. Pharmacy and therapeutics committee, consent and the hospital formulary Local formularies The roles of clinical pharmacologists in formulating medicines policy locally We are very grateful to our colleagues past and present who have contributed to our understanding of the work of the drug and therapeutics committee. R.S. is funded by the UCLH National Institute of Health Research Biomedical Research Centre. We welcome the submission of original studies or reviews, related to DTCs as part of the series.