Regulatory Flashcards

1
Q

National quality measures for anesthesia

A

Abx received within one hour prior to surgical incision

Peri-op temperature management

Pts on BBs who received their BB during the peri-op period

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2
Q

Important charting items that are looked at for national quality standards

A
Anesthesia start/end time and date
Surgical incision time
Abx name, dose, route, time, allergies
BB current med, last dose, peri-op admin if needed
Reasons for not giving BB peri-op
Temp
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3
Q

Med errors injure…

A

1.3 million people annually and cause at least 1 death per day in the US

Can occur during prescribing, repackaging, dispensing, administering, monitoring

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4
Q

Common meds errors invlovle

A

poor communication
Similar med names, abbreviations, poor instructions, poor handwriting
Poor procedures/techniques
Pt misuse door to poorly understood instructions
Job stress, lack of training, similar/confusing labelling

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5
Q

Institute for safe medication practices

A
Lists high risk meds
List dangerous abbreviations
Can search recent med safety info
Report med errors and ADRs
Link to FDA's medwatch
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6
Q

AANA needle safety

A

Never use same needle/syringe for more than one pt
Never reuse any needle for any reason
Never refill a syringe, even for the same pt
Never reuse infusion sets
Never reuse a syringe/needle to draw from a multi-dose vial
Never reenter a single use medication vial/amp/solution

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7
Q

AANA statement on propofol

A

Should be kept in a secure environment and kept track of

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8
Q

FDA approval process

A
Pre-clinical
IRB
Clinical
OTC
Generic
Post-approval
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9
Q

Major FDA legislation

A

1906 Pure food and drugs act- requires truthful labeling of all drugs

1912 Amendment prohibits fraudulent advertising

1938 Food, drug, cosmetic act- requires proof of safety and purity

1951 Durham-Humphrey Amendment- gives FDA authority to determine which meds can be sold without a prescription

1962 Kefauver-Harris Amendment- requires proof of efficacy, puts forth guidelines for ADR reporting, testing, and advertising

1983 Orphan drug act

1984 Drug price competition and patent restoration act- shorter approval time for generics, extends patents caused by FDA delay

1992 Expedited drug approval act- special drugs can be approved faster, but need more postmarketing studies

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10
Q

The CDER assures safe and effective drugs for the US and is in charge of what three major areas

A

New drug development process

IND review process

NDA review process

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11
Q

Ethics in drug development

A

Balance of risk and benefit for the subject. 4 major principles-

Trial must minimize risks
Provisions must be made for care of the subjects
Must terminate trial when risks become incompatible with goals
Adverse events must be reported immediately to ethics/safety committee

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12
Q

Informed consent

A

Pt must be aware of B/R/A- if terminal they must realize this will not benefit them, but likely future patients

Well informed of the entire process before making a voluntary choice to participate

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13
Q

IRB

A

Located within hospitals and research centers- Mandated by the FDA. Review ethical/legal issues related to research.

Ensure subjects are fully informed and protected

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14
Q

IRB composition

A

5 experts and lay people with varying backgrounds

Must be able to evaluate proposals with law, institutional regulations/commitments, professional standards, and community attitudes in mind

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15
Q

Specific IRB criteria

A
Minimizes risks to human subjects
Risks are reasonable relative to possible benefits and scientific gain
Equitable selection of subjects
Informed consent
Safeguards vulnerable populations
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16
Q

Preclinical

A

Show drug is reasonable and safe in small scale studies

In vitro, animal studies
Previous clinical testing results
Proposed protocol

Info is submitted in form of IND- 30 day review of chemistry, pharm/toxicology, medical potential

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17
Q

Preclinical goals

A
Establish potential efficacy and safety
Determine biological actions
Chemical properties
Kinetics
Synthesis/purification
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18
Q

Preclinical research

A

Animals- used as little as possible. Two or more species. Used for kinetics, safety testing

Short term testing- 2 weeks to 3 months

Long term- Several weeks to years, can continue after human testing for long term AE searches

19
Q

Clinical studies can proceed when

A

IND is active following FDA review

IRB approves the study protocol

20
Q

Phase I

A

20-100 subjects, several months, purpose is SAFETY

21
Q

Phase II

A

Several hundred subjects, severals months to 2 years, purpose is EFFECTIVENESS AND SHORT TERM SAFETY

22
Q

Phase III

A

Several hundred to thousands, 1-4 years, SAFETY, DOSAGE, EFFECTIVENESS

23
Q

NDA

A

Formal proposal for the FDA to approve a new drug. Includes- non clinical, clinical, drug, and manufacturing information from all previously completed studies

Must provide enough info to answer- Is it safe/effective with benefits that outweigh risks

Is the labeling appropriate

Is the manufacturing adequate

24
Q

Compassionate use protocols

A

Drugs must show preliminary efficacy

Pt must be likely to die or suffer rapid progression within several months or die prematurely without treatment

Must be no comparable approved therapy to treat the disease at that stage

25
Q

Generic drug review

A

Abbreviated NDA must-
Contain same active ingredient as original drug
Be identical in strength, dosage form, and ROA
Have the same indications
Be bioequivalent
Meet same batch requirements
Meet the same manufacturing requirements

26
Q

OTC review

A

6 out of 10 meds are OTC

>80 classes of OTC drugs, >100,000 products

27
Q

Phase IV (post approval)

A

More information about SE and safety when used in the general population

Long term risk/benefit analysis

Efficacy in the general population

FDA may require these studies

28
Q

How does CDER monitor safety and efficacy

A

Pharmacovigilance and Epidemiology division
MEDWatch
Pharmacoepidemiology
Contracts/Coop agreements

29
Q

MEDWatch

A

Started in 1993, 4 goals:
Make it easier the report serious events
Make it clear what type of ADEs are being reported to the FDA
Widely disseminate information about FDA action regarding ADEs
Increase provider awareness of drug/device-induced disease

30
Q

Inpatient Rx

A

Patient ID
Date and time the Rx is written
Allergy Status

31
Q

Rx writing

A
Full med name (generic prefered)
Dose must be written
Frequency (PRN must specify as well)
Duration when indicated (Abx)
Include reason for all PRN orders

Include special parameters for titration, monitoring, or administration

If weight based, must include pt weight AND the calculated dose based on that weight

Round to nearest dosing increment

Sign with full name, title, and pager #

For verbal/telephone, receiver must read back the order

32
Q

For outpatient Rx

A

Have name, office address, and phone #

Pts name, address, date

Directions for pt/pharmacist

Name of drug and quantity

Refills if needed

33
Q

Outpatient controlled Rx

A

Must include DEA # and

CIII-V- only 5 refills or 6 months, whichever comes first

C-II- no refills, hard copy only, signature required

State Laws vary widely in addition to these requirements

34
Q

DEA Class I

A

High abuse potential
No currently accepted medical use in the US
Lack accepted safety for use

Heroin, marijuana

35
Q

Class II

A

High abuse potential
Currently accepted medical use in the US or accepted with severe restrictions
Abuse may lead to severe dependence

Morphine, fentanyl, mathadone

36
Q

Class III

A

Less abuse potential than I and II

Accepted medical use in the US

Low/moderate dependence potential

Buprenorphine, Lortab, Tylenol 3, Dronabinol, Testosterone

37
Q

Class IV

A

Low abuse potential

Accepted medical use

Limited dependence potential

38
Q

Class V

A

Low abuse potential

Accepted medical use

Limited dependence potential

Codeine/Promethazine syrup, pregabalin

39
Q

Pregnancy A

A

Well controlled human studies showing no increased risk of fetal abnormalities in any trimester

Folic acid, B6, levothyroxine

40
Q

Pregnancy B

A

Animal studies showing no harm, but no human studies OR

Human studies say its ok, animal studies suggest some risk

APAP, prednisone, insulin, ibuprofen (before 3rd trimester), amoxicillin

41
Q

Pregnancy C

A

Animal studies have shown adverse effect and no human studies OR

No animal studies and no adequate human studies

Many antidepressants, carbamazepine, cipro, fluconazole

42
Q

Pregnancy D

A

Human studies have shown risk, however potential benefits may still outweigh risks

ETOH, lithium, phenytoin, valproic acid, tetracyclines, ACEI, most chemo

43
Q

Pregnancy X

A

Animal or human studies have demonstrated increased risk of fetal problems

No use in pregnant women

Isotretinoin, thalidomide, misoprostil