Page History
...
The use cases supported by the Combination (Real) Packaged Clinical Drug concept Drug concept type are the same as those for the basic real packaged clinical drug , with the additional detail that administration that administration records may wish to identify which of the particular component clinical drugs were administered at any particular point in time of the administration event (using AIDC or similar).
...
For abstract concepts, the combination packaged clinical drug , contains two or more different clinical drugs.
For real concepts, the combination real packaged real packaged clinical drug contains drug contains two or more different real clinical drugs. The package is placed in the supply chain using a using a single name (which may be a trade or brand name) by a single supplier organisation, even if one or more of the component real clinical drugs is sourced from a different organisation; for . For this reason, the 774158006 the 774158006 |Has product name| and 774159003 and 774159003 |Has supplier| attributes are optionally included.
A combination packaged clinical drug may also be called a "component product" or a "multi-component package" as the product itself is a package that contains more than one type of component element (clinical drug) within it; it . It may also be known as or a "kit" or a "combination medicinal product". Occasionally a combination packaged clinical drug is may be known as a "compound product" , but this term risks being confused with products that are extemporaneously compounded by a pharmacist from a formula provided by the prescriber for an individual patient (sometimes also known as "magistral products").
Examples of combination packaged clinical drug include a package each containing:
- A package containing clotrimazole cutaneous cream and one or more clotrimazole vaginal tablets for treatment of vaginal candidiasis
- A package containing clotrimazole cutaneous cream and one or more fluconazole oral capsules for treatment of vaginal candidiasis
- A package containing combinations of ethinylestradiol and levonorgestrel tablets in different strengths and which may also include inert tablets for oral contraception (note that in this example, the components are themselves multi-ingredient items)
- A package containing amoxicillin, clarithromycin and lansoprazole for treatment of Helicobacter infection
- A package containing a budesonide dispersible tablet and the vehicle to disperse it in , to make a rectal solution for treatment of colitis
- A package containing rasburicase 1.5 mg powder for solution for injection and the diluent solution
This specification for national drug extensions recommends that a combination packaged clinical drug should should be represented only as packaged products (real packaged clinical drugs, and , if an abstract representation is required, as packaged clinical drugs), with their individual components represented as clinical drugs. For practical implementation of a national terminology, mechanisms such as reference sets may be used to include include combination packaged clinical drug with other classes of medicinal product (such as clinical drugs) to aid users in finding and selecting these products.
...
Gliffy Diagram | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Figure 4541: Diagram of options for a national extension describing combination real packaged clinical drugs
In some representations of combination packagescombination packages, and particularly in ISO 11615 in IDMP, a "combined dose form " concept is used in the name of the combination product (for example ", pessary and cream"). Although useful as a concept to describe the dose form using a single attribute and value, a combination dose form concept does not easily support knowing which component has which dose form. The model used here, whereby each clinical drug is described with its appropriate dose form and they are brought together into the packaged product containing the components, does not require the use of combination dose form concepts.
For those combination packages that contain a diluent as an item in the package, national extensions may decide not to explicitly describe the diluent as a component , but merely to describe its presence in the text of the fully specified name for the real packaged medicinal product; alternatively, the national extension may author a "diluent" clinical drug concept and use that as one of the components of the combination product. If the constitution of the diluent is known (e.g., water for injections, 0.9% sodium chloride solution for injection), the clinical drug for the diluent can be explicitly described. Dual chamber products containing the two components (where one is the diluent) in a single unit of presentation can be described as combination products if required.
...
The (real) packaged clinical drug class is related to the clinical drug class by a composition relationship relationship, and therefore the attribute "contains clinical drug" , the
Concept | ||
---|---|---|
|
Representation of packaged medicinal products should use Clinical Drugs that have presentation strength (either only, or in addition to, concentration strength) whenever possible in order to be able to accurately describe the number of presentation units present in the package. The exception will be is for continuous products such as semi-solid dose forms of creams, gels, etc. where strength pattern 3a is used (see international Editorial Guidelines International Medicinal Product Model). In all cases, the pack size and pack size unit should relate to the denominator unit of the strength.
Semantic tag | (packaged clinical drug) OR (real packaged clinical drug) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Definition status |
Note: This can only be the case if extensions author concepts to represent real clinical drugs and/or product names and manufacturer / supplier organisations | |||
Attribute: |
|Count |
---|
of |
---|
clinical |
---|
drug |
---|
type (attribute)| | Range
Cardinality
Note
| |
---|---|---|
Attribute Attribute: |
774158006 |
---|
|Has |
---|
product |
---|
name (attribute)| |
Cardinality
Notes
|
---|
|
|
| |
Attribute: Attribute: |
---|
774159003 |Has supplier (attribute)| 774159003 |
---|
|Has |
---|
supplier (attribute)| |
Cardinality
Notes
| |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Role Group 1..* for combination packaged clinical drugs | Attribute: |
774160008 |
|Contains |
clinical |
drug (attribute)| |
Cardinality
Note
| ||
Attribute: |
1142142004 |Has pack size (attribute)| |
1142142004 |
|Has |
pack |
size (attribute)| | Range
Cardinality
Note
|
Attribute: |
774163005 |
|Has |
pack |
size |
unit (attribute)| |
Cardinality
Note
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Example Diagrams
Example: combination packaged clinical drug: stated view followed by the inferred view
Figure 4642: Example of a combination packaged clinical drug - stated view
Figure 4743: Example of a combination packaged clinical drug - inferred view
Example: combination real packaged clinical drug: stated view followed by the inferred view
Figure 4844: Example of a combination real packaged clinical drug - stated view
Figure 4945: Example of a combination real packaged clinical drug - inferred view
IDMP Compatibility
Since the ISO the ISO 11615 standard treats all Packaged all Packaged Medicinal Products in the same manner , whether they are standard products or combination products, and because the associations between the manufactured item(s) present in the package are described using recursive relationships, the Combination Real Packaged Real Packaged Medicinal Product is equivalent to a Packaged a Packaged Medicinal Product identified by a PCID. As with the Real Packaged Real Packaged Medicinal Product. , the Combination Real Packaged Real Packaged Medicinal Product Product is a representation a representation of the "real world product " authorised for sale and/or supply that exists for all jurisdictions and which is marketed into the supply chain for use, it is a concept that should form the 1:1 join between representation in the regulatory domain (IDMP) and representation in the clinical domain (SNOMED CT and national medicinal product terminologies) , even if some national medicinal product terminologies choose not to represent it.
...