Evolution of paediatric off‐label use after new significant medicines become available for adults: a study on triptans in Finnish children 1994–2007

WHAT IS ALREADY KNOWN ABOUT THIS SUBJECT • Off‐label use in children is widespread. New medicines lack marketing authorization for paediatric use, even when they represent significant therapeutic advantages and are intended for treatment of conditions common in children. • Until now no information e...

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Published inBritish journal of clinical pharmacology Vol. 71; no. 6; pp. 929 - 935
Main Authors Lindkvist, Johanna, Airaksinen, Marja, Kaukonen, Ann Marie, Klaukka, Timo, Hoppu, Kalle
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford, UK Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.06.2011
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Abstract WHAT IS ALREADY KNOWN ABOUT THIS SUBJECT • Off‐label use in children is widespread. New medicines lack marketing authorization for paediatric use, even when they represent significant therapeutic advantages and are intended for treatment of conditions common in children. • Until now no information exists on how off‐label use in children develops over time after a significant new medicine is approved for adults and what happens when it is later labelled for one paediatric age group. WHAT THIS STUDY ADDS • Off‐label use of a new significant medicine begins in adolescents and extends to younger children with delay. First marketing authorization to adolescents, providing a more child‐friendly formulation, results in increase of off‐label use in younger children, and has limited effect on total off‐label use. AIM To investigate the evolution of paediatric off‐label use after a therapeutically new group of medicines for a common condition becomes available for adults but is labelled for children with a delay of several years. METHODS Triptans were used as a model, because migraine is common in children, and is the only indication for triptans. Data on all triptan prescriptions 1994–2007 were extracted from the nationwide Finnish Prescription Register. Prescriptions for children were compared over time. RESULTS Paediatric patients with triptan prescriptions increased from 204 in 1994 to 2618 in 2007. Sumatriptan accounted for 64% of all paediatric triptan prescriptions. When sumatriptan in a nasal formulation was labelled for children ≥12 years in 2003, off‐label prescribing to younger children (6–11 years) doubled in 2003–2004. Sumatriptan on‐label prescriptions increased to 728 adolescents (45% of sumatriptan in the age group) in 2007, but its off‐label use continued also to increase to 1119 (61% of paediatric sumatriptan prescriptions) in 2007. In that year 72% of paediatric triptan use was off‐label, 28% on‐label. CONCLUSIONS When a new significant medicine becomes available in adults, off‐label use in children starts slowly but continues to extend to younger children reaching a market size which is little influenced by late appearance of a labelled product. Paediatric treatment remains dominated by off‐label use despite labelling of a product in an age appropriate formulation to the most relevant age group.
AbstractList WHAT IS ALREADY KNOWN ABOUT THIS SUBJECT • Off‐label use in children is widespread. New medicines lack marketing authorization for paediatric use, even when they represent significant therapeutic advantages and are intended for treatment of conditions common in children. • Until now no information exists on how off‐label use in children develops over time after a significant new medicine is approved for adults and what happens when it is later labelled for one paediatric age group. WHAT THIS STUDY ADDS • Off‐label use of a new significant medicine begins in adolescents and extends to younger children with delay. First marketing authorization to adolescents, providing a more child‐friendly formulation, results in increase of off‐label use in younger children, and has limited effect on total off‐label use. AIM To investigate the evolution of paediatric off‐label use after a therapeutically new group of medicines for a common condition becomes available for adults but is labelled for children with a delay of several years. METHODS Triptans were used as a model, because migraine is common in children, and is the only indication for triptans. Data on all triptan prescriptions 1994–2007 were extracted from the nationwide Finnish Prescription Register. Prescriptions for children were compared over time. RESULTS Paediatric patients with triptan prescriptions increased from 204 in 1994 to 2618 in 2007. Sumatriptan accounted for 64% of all paediatric triptan prescriptions. When sumatriptan in a nasal formulation was labelled for children ≥12 years in 2003, off‐label prescribing to younger children (6–11 years) doubled in 2003–2004. Sumatriptan on‐label prescriptions increased to 728 adolescents (45% of sumatriptan in the age group) in 2007, but its off‐label use continued also to increase to 1119 (61% of paediatric sumatriptan prescriptions) in 2007. In that year 72% of paediatric triptan use was off‐label, 28% on‐label. CONCLUSIONS When a new significant medicine becomes available in adults, off‐label use in children starts slowly but continues to extend to younger children reaching a market size which is little influenced by late appearance of a labelled product. Paediatric treatment remains dominated by off‐label use despite labelling of a product in an age appropriate formulation to the most relevant age group.
• Off-label use in children is widespread. New medicines lack marketing authorization for paediatric use, even when they represent significant therapeutic advantages and are intended for treatment of conditions common in children. • Until now no information exists on how off-label use in children develops over time after a significant new medicine is approved for adults and what happens when it is later labelled for one paediatric age group.WHAT IS ALREADY KNOWN ABOUT THIS SUBJECT• Off-label use in children is widespread. New medicines lack marketing authorization for paediatric use, even when they represent significant therapeutic advantages and are intended for treatment of conditions common in children. • Until now no information exists on how off-label use in children develops over time after a significant new medicine is approved for adults and what happens when it is later labelled for one paediatric age group.• Off-label use of a new significant medicine begins in adolescents and extends to younger children with delay. First marketing authorization to adolescents, providing a more child-friendly formulation, results in increase of off-label use in younger children, and has limited effect on total off-label use.WHAT THIS STUDY ADDS• Off-label use of a new significant medicine begins in adolescents and extends to younger children with delay. First marketing authorization to adolescents, providing a more child-friendly formulation, results in increase of off-label use in younger children, and has limited effect on total off-label use.To investigate the evolution of paediatric off-label use after a therapeutically new group of medicines for a common condition becomes available for adults but is labelled for children with a delay of several years.AIMTo investigate the evolution of paediatric off-label use after a therapeutically new group of medicines for a common condition becomes available for adults but is labelled for children with a delay of several years.Triptans were used as a model, because migraine is common in children, and is the only indication for triptans. Data on all triptan prescriptions 1994-2007 were extracted from the nationwide Finnish Prescription Register. Prescriptions for children were compared over time.METHODSTriptans were used as a model, because migraine is common in children, and is the only indication for triptans. Data on all triptan prescriptions 1994-2007 were extracted from the nationwide Finnish Prescription Register. Prescriptions for children were compared over time.Paediatric patients with triptan prescriptions increased from 204 in 1994 to 2618 in 2007. Sumatriptan accounted for 64% of all paediatric triptan prescriptions. When sumatriptan in a nasal formulation was labelled for children ≥ 12 years in 2003, off-label prescribing to younger children (6-11 years) doubled in 2003-2004. Sumatriptan on-label prescriptions increased to 728 adolescents (45% of sumatriptan in the age group) in 2007, but its off-label use continued also to increase to 1119 (61% of paediatric sumatriptan prescriptions) in 2007. In that year 72% of paediatric triptan use was off-label, 28% on-label.RESULTSPaediatric patients with triptan prescriptions increased from 204 in 1994 to 2618 in 2007. Sumatriptan accounted for 64% of all paediatric triptan prescriptions. When sumatriptan in a nasal formulation was labelled for children ≥ 12 years in 2003, off-label prescribing to younger children (6-11 years) doubled in 2003-2004. Sumatriptan on-label prescriptions increased to 728 adolescents (45% of sumatriptan in the age group) in 2007, but its off-label use continued also to increase to 1119 (61% of paediatric sumatriptan prescriptions) in 2007. In that year 72% of paediatric triptan use was off-label, 28% on-label.When a new significant medicine becomes available in adults, off-label use in children starts slowly but continues to extend to younger children reaching a market size which is little influenced by late appearance of a labelled product. Paediatric treatment remains dominated by off-label use despite labelling of a product in an age appropriate formulation to the most relevant age group.CONCLUSIONSWhen a new significant medicine becomes available in adults, off-label use in children starts slowly but continues to extend to younger children reaching a market size which is little influenced by late appearance of a labelled product. Paediatric treatment remains dominated by off-label use despite labelling of a product in an age appropriate formulation to the most relevant age group.
• Off-label use in children is widespread. New medicines lack marketing authorization for paediatric use, even when they represent significant therapeutic advantages and are intended for treatment of conditions common in children. • Until now no information exists on how off-label use in children develops over time after a significant new medicine is approved for adults and what happens when it is later labelled for one paediatric age group. • Off-label use of a new significant medicine begins in adolescents and extends to younger children with delay. First marketing authorization to adolescents, providing a more child-friendly formulation, results in increase of off-label use in younger children, and has limited effect on total off-label use. To investigate the evolution of paediatric off-label use after a therapeutically new group of medicines for a common condition becomes available for adults but is labelled for children with a delay of several years. Triptans were used as a model, because migraine is common in children, and is the only indication for triptans. Data on all triptan prescriptions 1994-2007 were extracted from the nationwide Finnish Prescription Register. Prescriptions for children were compared over time. Paediatric patients with triptan prescriptions increased from 204 in 1994 to 2618 in 2007. Sumatriptan accounted for 64% of all paediatric triptan prescriptions. When sumatriptan in a nasal formulation was labelled for children ≥ 12 years in 2003, off-label prescribing to younger children (6-11 years) doubled in 2003-2004. Sumatriptan on-label prescriptions increased to 728 adolescents (45% of sumatriptan in the age group) in 2007, but its off-label use continued also to increase to 1119 (61% of paediatric sumatriptan prescriptions) in 2007. In that year 72% of paediatric triptan use was off-label, 28% on-label. When a new significant medicine becomes available in adults, off-label use in children starts slowly but continues to extend to younger children reaching a market size which is little influenced by late appearance of a labelled product. Paediatric treatment remains dominated by off-label use despite labelling of a product in an age appropriate formulation to the most relevant age group.
WHAT IS ALREADY KNOWN ABOUT THIS SUBJECT • Off‐label use in children is widespread. New medicines lack marketing authorization for paediatric use, even when they represent significant therapeutic advantages and are intended for treatment of conditions common in children. • Until now no information exists on how off‐label use in children develops over time after a significant new medicine is approved for adults and what happens when it is later labelled for one paediatric age group. WHAT THIS STUDY ADDS • Off‐label use of a new significant medicine begins in adolescents and extends to younger children with delay. First marketing authorization to adolescents, providing a more child‐friendly formulation, results in increase of off‐label use in younger children, and has limited effect on total off‐label use. AIM To investigate the evolution of paediatric off‐label use after a therapeutically new group of medicines for a common condition becomes available for adults but is labelled for children with a delay of several years. METHODS Triptans were used as a model, because migraine is common in children, and is the only indication for triptans. Data on all triptan prescriptions 1994–2007 were extracted from the nationwide Finnish Prescription Register. Prescriptions for children were compared over time. RESULTS Paediatric patients with triptan prescriptions increased from 204 in 1994 to 2618 in 2007. Sumatriptan accounted for 64% of all paediatric triptan prescriptions. When sumatriptan in a nasal formulation was labelled for children ≥12 years in 2003, off‐label prescribing to younger children (6–11 years) doubled in 2003–2004. Sumatriptan on‐label prescriptions increased to 728 adolescents (45% of sumatriptan in the age group) in 2007, but its off‐label use continued also to increase to 1119 (61% of paediatric sumatriptan prescriptions) in 2007. In that year 72% of paediatric triptan use was off‐label, 28% on‐label. CONCLUSIONS When a new significant medicine becomes available in adults, off‐label use in children starts slowly but continues to extend to younger children reaching a market size which is little influenced by late appearance of a labelled product. Paediatric treatment remains dominated by off‐label use despite labelling of a product in an age appropriate formulation to the most relevant age group.
Author Kaukonen, Ann Marie
Hoppu, Kalle
Klaukka, Timo
Lindkvist, Johanna
Airaksinen, Marja
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Medicine
Drug
Triptan derivatives
Adult
Evolution
labelling
off-label drug use
triptan
Child
paediatric
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Snippet WHAT IS ALREADY KNOWN ABOUT THIS SUBJECT • Off‐label use in children is widespread. New medicines lack marketing authorization for paediatric use, even when...
• Off-label use in children is widespread. New medicines lack marketing authorization for paediatric use, even when they represent significant therapeutic...
SourceID pubmedcentral
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SourceType Open Access Repository
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StartPage 929
SubjectTerms Adolescent
Adult
Age Factors
Biological and medical sciences
Child
Drug Approval
Female
Finland
Humans
labelling
Male
Medical sciences
Migraine Disorders - drug therapy
Off-Label Use - legislation & jurisprudence
Off-Label Use - statistics & numerical data
off‐label drug use
Oxazolidinones - therapeutic use
paediatric
Paediatric Clinical Pharmacology
Pharmacology. Drug treatments
Serotonin 5-HT1 Receptor Agonists - therapeutic use
Sumatriptan - therapeutic use
Time Factors
Triazoles - therapeutic use
triptan
Tryptamines - therapeutic use
Young Adult
Title Evolution of paediatric off‐label use after new significant medicines become available for adults: a study on triptans in Finnish children 1994–2007
URI https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111%2Fj.1365-2125.2010.03881.x
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21564161
https://www.proquest.com/docview/866534731
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/PMC3099380
Volume 71
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