Translation in Pharmacovigilance: Ensuring Accurate ADR Reports

Translation in Pharmacovigilance: Ensuring Accurate ADR Reports
Nov 15, 2025
SumaLatam

Introduction

Translation in pharmacovigilance demands speed and accuracy. When translating adverse drug reaction (ADR) reports, missing or ambiguous information can affect patient safety and signal detection. This guide offers practical steps to ensure reliable, consistent reports for safety teams.

Priorities: speed without compromising accuracy

  • Timeliness: translate reports quickly to meet regulatory deadlines.
  • Precision: preserve exact clinical meaning for symptoms, doses and timelines.
  • Traceability: log changes and owners for audits.

Standardized terminology and essential resources

  • Validated glossary: a central glossary with key terms (reaction, severity, outcome).
  • Equivalence tables: units, abbreviations and active substance names.
  • Translation memory (TM): store approved segments to maintain consistency across reports.

Recommended workflow for ADR translation

  1. Receive & prioritize: flag urgent reports (seriousness, hospitalization).
  2. Protect data: anonymize personal identifiers before sharing externally.
  3. Specialized translation: use translators with pharmacovigilance and clinical terminology expertise.
  4. Rapid technical review: SME or safety officer validates critical terms.
  5. Focused QA: automated and manual checks for numbers, dates and units.
  6. Delivery & logging: include metadata (version, translator, date) and store in secure repository.

Preventing loss of critical information

  • Do not summarize or omit clinical details in translation.
  • Preserve textual event descriptions as recorded in the source.
  • Flag uncertainties with comments and escalate to clinical reviewers.
  • Use structured forms with mandatory fields to avoid omissions.

Suggested KPIs

  • Average turnaround for critical reports (hours).
  • % glossary match rate.
  • Queries per report (clarifications requested).
  • Critical errors found in QA per 1,000 words.

Security and compliance best practices

  • Sign confidentiality and data protection agreements.
  • Encrypt transfers and enforce role-based access.
  • Maintain audit logs for traceability.

Conclusion

Accurate ADR reporting depends on rapid, standardized and controlled translation workflows. At SumaLatam we design glossary-driven processes, audit translations and optimize workflows for pharmacovigilance. Contact us for a process review and tailored proposal.

 AI + Human Workflows: Best Practices for Regulatory Documents

 AI + Human Workflows: Best Practices for Regulatory Documents

Introduction Combining machine translation and human review accelerates large projects while retaining quality. For regulatory documents, this hybrid approach requires strict rules for quality levels, traceability and auditing. This article explains when to use...

Translation Memory ROI: How to Measure Impact Without Talking Prices

Translation Memory ROI: How to Measure Impact Without Talking Prices

Introduction Translation memories are an operational lever for regulated content. Evaluating their impact should focus on operational indicators: match rates, review intensity, content reuse and traceability for audits. This article explains what to measure, how to...

Partnering with NGOs & Communities for Cultural Validation

Partnering with NGOs & Communities for Cultural Validation

Introduction Validating materials with NGOs and community groups improves relevance, comprehension and uptake. When content is developed with the people who will use it, misunderstandings decrease and acceptance rises. This article outlines practical steps to design...

How to Choose a Medical Translation Partner: 7 Critical Capabilities

How to Choose a Medical Translation Partner: 7 Critical Capabilities

Introduction Selecting a translation vendor for pharmaceutical or medtech work requires more than comparing prices. It is essential to evaluate capabilities that ensure regulatory compliance, terminological accuracy, data security and audit traceability. Below are...