Oracle® Argus Insight Administrator's Guide Release 7.0.2 E38587-01 |
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Any adverse event associated with the use of a drug or biological product in humans, whether or not considered product-related, including:
An adverse event occurring in the course of the use of a drug product in professional practice
An adverse event occurring from drug overdose whether accidental or intentional
An adverse event occurring from drug abuse
An adverse event occurring from drug withdrawal
Any failure of expected pharmacological action
Reporting an adverse experience does not necessarily reflect a conclusion by the applicant or the FDA that the product caused or contributed to the adverse experience.
Adverse experience is synonymous with adverse drug experience, adverse biological experience, adverse product experience, and adverse event.
Any individual or entity related by employment or organizational structure to the applicant, including all subsidiaries, whether domestic or foreign.
An individual or entity who holds the new drug application (NDA), the abbreviated new drug application (ANDA), or the biologics license application (BLA). For purposes of this glossary, this term includes any person whose name appears on the label of a marketed drug or licensed biological product as its manufacturer, packer, distributor, shared manufacturer, joint manufacturer, or any participant involved in divided manufacturing.
Determination of whether there is a reasonable possibility that the product is etiologically related to the adverse experience. For example, causality assessment includes assessment of temporal relationships, dechallenge/rechallenge information, association with (or lack of association with) underlying disease, presence (or absence) of a more likely cause, and physiologic plausibility.
A character position within a print line or on display. The positions are numbered consecutively from 1, starting at the leftmost character position and extending to the rightmost position. In relational database, a field defined for a given record.
A statement used to initiate an action or start a service. Administrators use commands to start database administration functions that access and maintain the database. Commands consists of the command name abbreviation, and its parameters and flags if applicable.
Comma-separated values file. In computers, a CSV file contains the values in a table as a series of ASCII text lines organized so that each column value is separated by a comma from the next column's value and each row starts a new line.
A subset of a data warehouse that contains data that is tailored and optimized for the specific reporting needs of a department or team. A data mart can be a subset of a warehouse for an entire organization, such as data that is contained in online analytical processing (OLAP) tools.
The process of collecting critical business information from a data warehouse, correlating the information, and uncovering associations, patterns, and trends.
A central repository for all or significant parts of the data that an organization's business systems collect. A subject-oriented nonvolatile collection of data used to support strategic decision making. The warehouse is the central point of data integration for business intelligence. It is the source of data for data marts within an enterprise and delivers a common view of enterprise data.
To convert data by the use of a code in such a manner that reconversion to the original form is possible.
Extract, transform, and load (ETL) process. The ETL process extracts a subset of data from the central data warehouse, transforms it, and loads it into one or more star schemas. These schemas can be included in data marts to answer specific business questions.
A log that contains information about events for a particular system or group, for a particular metric, or for all the events that are associated with a specific monitor.
Adverse experience listed in the current FDA-approved labeling for the drug or licensed biological product. This would include any section of the labeling that refers to adverse experience information.
In a record, a specified area used for a particular category of data. For example, a record about an employee might be subdivided into fields containing the employee's name, address, and salary.
A format in which the output consists of structured field introducers and variable data rather than output in line format.
A device or program that separates data, signals, or material in accordance with specified criteria.
In query management, an object that describes how to format the data for printing or displaying a report. A display screen, printed document, or file with defined spaces for information to be inserted.
The original source of information concerning an adverse experience (for example, consumer or healthcare professional).
life-threatening adverse experience
An adverse experience that in the view of the initial reporter places the patient at immediate risk of death from the adverse experience as it occurred. It does not include an adverse experience that, had it occurred in a more severe form, might have caused death.
Continued presence of an adverse experience after withdrawal of the suspect product.
Failure of the product, when reintroduced, to produce signs or symptoms similar to those observed when the suspect product was previously introduced.
Partial or complete disappearance of an adverse experience after withdrawal of the suspect product.
Reoccurrence of similar signs and symptoms upon reintroduction of the suspect product.
Reintroduction of a suspect product suspected of having caused an adverse experience following a positive dechallenge.
In query management, the formatted data that results from running a query and applying a form to it. Data that has been selected and extracted according to the reporting tool, type of report desired, and formatting criteria.
A job function that identifies the tasks a user can perform, defines the access level the user has, and specifies the resources the user can access and modify at those levels. Users are limited in how they can access information if they do not have the proper role. A user can be assigned one or more roles.
An adverse experience occurring from any dose that results in any of the following outcomes: death, life-threatening adverse experience, initial inpatient hospitalization, prolongation of hospitalization, significant or persistent disability/incapacity, or congenital anomaly/birth defect (including that occurring in a fetus). Important medical events, based upon appropriate medical judgment, that may jeopardize the patient or subject and may require medical or surgical intervention to prevent one of the outcomes listed above.
A communication from an individual (for example, consumer or healthcare professional) to a company or regulatory authority that describes a suspected adverse experience. It does not include cases identified from information solicited by the applicant such as individual cases or findings derived from a study.
Any organized data collection system (for example, adverse experience information derived from a clinical trial or patient registry including pregnancy registries). Reports from company sponsored patient support programs and disease management programs should be handled as if they were study reports and not spontaneous reports.
Drug or biological product associated with an adverse experience as determined by the initial reporter, regardless of the opinion of the applicant.
Functionality where you begin to type a value in a field and the system automatically displays the like values in a drop-down list. You can then select a value from the list.
Adverse experience not included in any section of the current FDA-approved labeling for the drug or licensed biological product. Includes an adverse experience that may differ from a labeled adverse experience because of greater severity or specificity (for example, abnormal liver function versus hepatic necrosis).
In addition, adverse experiences listed as occurring with a class of drugs or biological products but not specifically mentioned with a particular drug or biological product are considered unexpected (for example, a rash with antibiotic X would be considered unexpected if the labeling states rash may be associated with antibiotics because the labeling does not specifically state rash is associated with antibiotic X). Reports of death from an adverse experience are considered unexpected unless the possibility of a fatal outcome from that adverse experience is stated in the labeling.
An application that is downloaded from the web each time it is run. The advantage is the application can be run from any computer, and the software is routinely upgraded and maintained by the hosting organization rather than by each individual user.
A client program that initiates requests to a web server and displays the information that the server returns.
A software program that is capable of servicing Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) requests.