Marketing authorisation holders are increasingly challenged to identify all potential adverse events (AEs) and proactively address them with each new product that comes to market. In this article, Alison Sloane, General Manager of Vigilance Detect at IQVIA, discusses how adopting technology can not only streamline pharmacovigilance processes, but also address operational budget challenges.
Managing and reporting the growing volumes of adverse events (AEs) is progressively more challenging for pharmaceutical companies as the number of data sources grows. The anticipated number of AEs is expected to increase dramatically as more products are brought to market and pharmacovigilance teams are doing their best to adopt processes that will enable them to keep pace. Most recently, we saw this challenge arise as the initially predicted volumes of AEs for COVID-19 vaccines were quickly outpaced. With more vaccines and treatments rolling out for COVID-19 and various other diseases, we can equally expect to see an influx of AEs paralleling the data these treatments will generate.
Are you looking to explore how lipid formulations in softgels can enhance drug absorption and bioavailability. Register for our upcoming webinar to find out!
3 September 2025 | 3:00 PM BST | FREE Webinar
This webinar will delve into the different types of lipid formulations, such as solutions, suspensions, emulsions, and self-(micro)emulsifying systems. Applications span diverse therapeutic areas including HIV therapy, oncology, immunosuppressants, and emerging treatments like medicinal cannabis (eg, CBD).
What You’ll Learn:
Lipid formulation development and screening tools for optimisation
Key steps in scale-up and industrialisation to ensure consistency and efficiency
Impact of lipid-based softgels on drug delivery and patient outcomes.
Marketing Authorisation Holders (MAHs) are challenged to identify all potential AEs and proactively incorporate a strategy to address them down the line with each new product that comes to market. As data amasses, this becomes harder and harder for people to do manually. Consequently, leaders are seeing the need to become early adopters of new technologies in the interest of digitally transforming their pharmacovigilance teams. They are beginning to equip teams with new tools that are up to the challenge of managing massive amounts of data, regardless of the source, and aiding in comprehensively capturing AEs as they appear.
More adverse event data demands more comprehensive monitoring
Over the past year, the pharmaceutical industry has been challenged to ramp up the rollout of new vaccines and treatments specific to COVID-19, while also keeping patient safety at the forefront. In parallel, the outcomes of the pandemic drove a massive increase in telehealth adoption, which has given pharmacovigilance teams a new pool of unstructured data on patients to monitor for potential AEs. This data can come in many forms, from a doctor’s notes in electronic health records (EHRs), through call centre agents and out of office hours messaging services or social media posts, as well as in different languages, whether they be in written or audio formats. This data can contain safety events or risks. However, it comes with serious challenges around how to make sense of the information and identify where pharmacovigilance professionals should invest their attention quickly and efficiently.
As the channels by which AEs can be reported expand, proactively adopting technologies for pharmacovigilance such as artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning (ML) and natural language processing (NLP) will be critical in keeping pace to avoid under-reporting. Most critically, NLP can take the new unstructured data from any source and convert it to structured formats which AI and ML can then be applied to. These capabilities are expanding even further with the rise of audio transcription capabilities, which can identify AEs discussed on calls and mitigate the need for costly and time-consuming manual transcriptions. As an added layer on top of identification, AI-based auto-prioritisation can filter out the noise and draw the attention of the company to serious or unexpected events captured via text and audio. In turn, the confluence of these capabilities will enable timely identification of potential adverse events and address possible threat to patient safety before it becomes widespread.
Implementing technology is empowering pharmacovigilance teams to streamline their process from AE identification to processing, which has historically been very siloed. Leveraging AI for automated detection of AEs allows pharma companies to process them more efficiently once they are identified. These strategies ultimately promote better patient safety by mitigating the lag time between becoming aware of sources of potential AEs and identifying AEs within these for case processing and regulatory reporting.
Reaping the business benefits of technology driven strategy
For too long, companies have had to rely on expanding their staff to address data processing challenges – a strategy that is both extremely costly and always a temporary fix. By revitalising their strategy through digital transformation, teams can mitigate the need to hire more support by up to 90 percent and eliminate the repetitive and costly manual processes associated with pharmacovigilance. Additionally, less focus is needed on manual reporting tasks such as zero-touch processing, allowing pharmaceutical organisations to focus on risk management and strategy instead.
Moreover, a technology driven strategy can help address operational budget challenges. There has been a 20 percent increase in AE volumes companies must process. This influx has forced over 70 percent of their operational budgets to remain dedicated to meeting routine regulatory requirements and only 20 to 30 percent available for value-driving operational activities and meaningful safety improvements. Integrating automated technologies with existing IT infrastructure empowers leaders to utilise their legacy technology investments while making traction on further innovation that will keep them ahead of the curve and ready for new challenges.
Looking forward
The pandemic underscored the extent to which pharmacovigilance teams are overextended to maintain patient safety and regulatory compliance – and the cadence of new drugs coming to market is not slowing down. As we continue to see our way through the pandemic and simultaneously prepare for the future of medicine, being an early adopter of technology and prioritising digital transformation will pay dividends to companies. Technology vendors also have a role to play in making their technologies available on a trial basis, or providing opportunities for proof of concepts and pilots, so that leaders can test run their value without a long-term commitment. These acts of partnership and trust will be invaluable to foster confidence in these investments, which will equip companies for faster adoption when these tools inevitably evolve from an “added bonus” to a “must-have” for business success.
About the author
Alison Sloane is a Senior Director and General Manager of Technology Solutions at IQVIA.
As General Manager of Vigilance Detect (powered by AETracker®), Alison’s focus is on driving the vision to provide customers with a tech-enabled optimised approach to adverse event and risk detection in structured and unstructured data. Alison joined Quintiles Drug Safety over 20 years ago. Shortly thereafter, she assumed a customer managed secondment to a pharmaceutical company for 15 months in the UK. During this time, Alison gained experience in a wide range of pharmacovigilance tasks from clinical trials to post marketing and on return to Quintiles she expanded her roles in clinical trials, endpoint management, regulatory reporting and line management. Alison’s leadership roles included European leadership of the Pharmacovigilance unit (all functions), global leadership of the Clinical Endpoint Validation and Adjudication (CEVA) Department and subsequently global leadership of the Regulatory Reporting Department, including growing the teams, building out processes and directing the operational, contractual, financial and customer facing aspects of the organisation.
This website uses cookies to enable, optimise and analyse site operations, as well as to provide personalised content and allow you to connect to social media. By clicking "I agree" you consent to the use of cookies for non-essential functions and the related processing of personal data. You can adjust your cookie and associated data processing preferences at any time via our "Cookie Settings". Please view our Cookie Policy to learn more about the use of cookies on our website.
This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these cookies, the cookies that are categorised as ”Necessary” are stored on your browser as they are as essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. For our other types of cookies “Advertising & Targeting”, “Analytics” and “Performance”, these help us analyse and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these different types of cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may have an effect on your browsing experience. You can adjust the available sliders to ‘Enabled’ or ‘Disabled’, then click ‘Save and Accept’. View our Cookie Policy page.
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Cookie
Description
cookielawinfo-checkbox-advertising-targeting
The cookie is set by GDPR cookie consent to record the user consent for the cookies in the category "Advertising & Targeting".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-analytics
This cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent WordPress Plugin. The cookie is used to remember the user consent for the cookies under the category "Analytics".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-necessary
This cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Necessary".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-performance
This cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent WordPress Plugin. The cookie is used to remember the user consent for the cookies under the category "Performance".
PHPSESSID
This cookie is native to PHP applications. The cookie is used to store and identify a users' unique session ID for the purpose of managing user session on the website. The cookie is a session cookies and is deleted when all the browser windows are closed.
viewed_cookie_policy
The cookie is set by the GDPR Cookie Consent plugin and is used to store whether or not user has consented to the use of cookies. It does not store any personal data.
zmember_logged
This session cookie is served by our membership/subscription system and controls whether you are able to see content which is only available to logged in users.
Performance cookies are includes cookies that deliver enhanced functionalities of the website, such as caching. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Cookie
Description
cf_ob_info
This cookie is set by Cloudflare content delivery network and, in conjunction with the cookie 'cf_use_ob', is used to determine whether it should continue serving “Always Online” until the cookie expires.
cf_use_ob
This cookie is set by Cloudflare content delivery network and is used to determine whether it should continue serving “Always Online” until the cookie expires.
free_subscription_only
This session cookie is served by our membership/subscription system and controls which types of content you are able to access.
ls_smartpush
This cookie is set by Litespeed Server and allows the server to store settings to help improve performance of the site.
one_signal_sdk_db
This cookie is set by OneSignal push notifications and is used for storing user preferences in connection with their notification permission status.
YSC
This cookie is set by Youtube and is used to track the views of embedded videos.
Analytics cookies collect information about your use of the content, and in combination with previously collected information, are used to measure, understand, and report on your usage of this website.
Cookie
Description
bcookie
This cookie is set by LinkedIn. The purpose of the cookie is to enable LinkedIn functionalities on the page.
GPS
This cookie is set by YouTube and registers a unique ID for tracking users based on their geographical location
lang
This cookie is set by LinkedIn and is used to store the language preferences of a user to serve up content in that stored language the next time user visit the website.
lidc
This cookie is set by LinkedIn and used for routing.
lissc
This cookie is set by LinkedIn share Buttons and ad tags.
vuid
We embed videos from our official Vimeo channel. When you press play, Vimeo will drop third party cookies to enable the video to play and to see how long a viewer has watched the video. This cookie does not track individuals.
wow.anonymousId
This cookie is set by Spotler and tracks an anonymous visitor ID.
wow.schedule
This cookie is set by Spotler and enables it to track the Load Balance Session Queue.
wow.session
This cookie is set by Spotler to track the Internet Information Services (IIS) session state.
wow.utmvalues
This cookie is set by Spotler and stores the UTM values for the session. UTM values are specific text strings that are appended to URLs that allow Communigator to track the URLs and the UTM values when they get clicked on.
_ga
This cookie is set by Google Analytics and is used to calculate visitor, session, campaign data and keep track of site usage for the site's analytics report. It stores information anonymously and assign a randomly generated number to identify unique visitors.
_gat
This cookies is set by Google Universal Analytics to throttle the request rate to limit the collection of data on high traffic sites.
_gid
This cookie is set by Google Analytics and is used to store information of how visitors use a website and helps in creating an analytics report of how the website is doing. The data collected including the number visitors, the source where they have come from, and the pages visited in an anonymous form.
Advertising and targeting cookies help us provide our visitors with relevant ads and marketing campaigns.
Cookie
Description
advanced_ads_browser_width
This cookie is set by Advanced Ads and measures the browser width.
advanced_ads_page_impressions
This cookie is set by Advanced Ads and measures the number of previous page impressions.
advanced_ads_pro_server_info
This cookie is set by Advanced Ads and sets geo-location, user role and user capabilities. It is used by cache busting in Advanced Ads Pro when the appropriate visitor conditions are used.
advanced_ads_pro_visitor_referrer
This cookie is set by Advanced Ads and sets the referrer URL.
bscookie
This cookie is a browser ID cookie set by LinkedIn share Buttons and ad tags.
IDE
This cookie is set by Google DoubleClick and stores information about how the user uses the website and any other advertisement before visiting the website. This is used to present users with ads that are relevant to them according to the user profile.
li_sugr
This cookie is set by LinkedIn and is used for tracking.
UserMatchHistory
This cookie is set by Linkedin and is used to track visitors on multiple websites, in order to present relevant advertisement based on the visitor's preferences.
VISITOR_INFO1_LIVE
This cookie is set by YouTube. Used to track the information of the embedded YouTube videos on a website.