Bigger burden, bad timing
In an interview, Robert Cotes, MD, who serves as a member of the clinical expert team for Serious Mental Illness Adviser, a joint initiative of the APA and the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, said the changes to the clozapine REMS will likely increase the administrative burden on clinicians.
In the letter to the FDA, the APA and other groups in the coalition expressed concern about patient status forms, which are five pages long. The coalition has requested that the FDA develop a form where clinicians can submit monitoring results on multiple patients at one time, with PDF forms presented in a fillable format.
“The concern is that if the workflows become more laborious for people, it could result in treatment interruptions for individuals on clozapine or potentially it may steer prescribers away from using clozapine for people who may need it,” said Dr. Cotes.
Also commenting for this news organization, Raymond C. Love, PharmD, professor and vice chair at the University of Maryland School of Pharmacy, Baltimore, emphasized the poor timing of the switch to a new clozapine REMS.
“Pharmacies are overloaded right now due to COVID tests and influenza and COVID boosters and COVID vaccinations for kids,” making it a tough time to manage the demands of the clozapine REMS re-enrollment, he said.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.