| May 21,
2007
Study: Pill raises risk of heart attacks
By MARILYNN MARCHIONE, AP Medical Writer
Mon May 21, 7:07 PM ET
A widely used diabetes pill raises the risk of
heart attacks and possibly death, according to a scientific analysis
that reveals what some experts are calling another Vioxx-like
example of the government failing to protect the public from an
unsafe drug.
More than 6 million people worldwide have taken the drug, sold
as Avandia and Avandamet, since it came on the market eight years
ago to help control blood sugar in people with the most common
form of diabetes. About 1 million Americans use it now.
Pooled results of dozens of studies on nearly 28,000 people revealed
a 43 percent higher risk of heart attack for those taking Avandia
compared to people taking other diabetes drugs or no diabetes
medication, according to the analysis published online Monday.
The study, published by the New England Journal of Medicine, also
found a trend toward more heart-related deaths.
The findings are frightening because two-thirds of diabetics
die of heart problems, so a drug that boosts this possibility
is especially hazardous for them.
Still, the actual risks to any single patient appear small. Diabetics
should talk to their doctors before stopping any medication, said
a statement issued by the American Diabetes Association and two
groups of heart doctors.
Avandia's maker, British-based GlaxoSmithKline PLC, disputed
the results of the analysis but acknowledged that its own similar
review found a 30 percent increased risk — information it
gave last August and possibly even earlier to the U.S. Food and
Drug Administration. But the company said that more rigorous studies
did not confirm excess risk.
FDA officials issued a safety alert on Monday and said they likely
would convene an advisory panel, but planned no immediate changes
to the current side effect warnings on the drug's packaging.
Several members of Congress expressed alarm. Rep. Henry Waxman
(news, bio, voting record), D-Calif., chairman of the House Committee
on Oversight and Government Reform, announced a hearing for June
6 on FDA's role. On the Senate floor, Charles Grassley (news,
bio, voting record), R-Iowa, criticized the agency for not acting
more swiftly.
"Do we have another Vioxx on our hands with Avandia? I am
not sure, but I intend to find out," he said, referring to
the blockbuster arthritis drug withdrawn in 2004 because of safety
problems. "Tens of millions of prescriptions have been written
for Avandia, and Medicare and Medicaid have paid hundreds of millions
of dollars for this drug."
Avandia is used to treat Type 2 diabetes, the most common form
of the disease, which is linked to obesity and afflicts 18 million
Americans and 200 million people worldwide. This form of diabetes
occurs when the body does not make enough insulin or cannot effectively
use what it manages to produce.
Avandia, or rosiglitazone, helps sensitize the body to insulin
and was considered a breakthrough medication for blood-sugar control.
It also is combined with metformin and sold as Avandamet. Only
one other drug like it — pioglitazone, sold as Actos and
Actoplus Met by Takeda Pharmaceuticals — is sold in the
United States.
Avandia had total U.S. sales of $2.2 billion in 2006, slightly
trailing $2.6 million for Actos, according to IMS Health, a healthcare
information company. About 13 million Avandia prescriptions were
filled in the U.S. last year. A one-month supply of Avandia sells
for between $90 and $170.
GlaxoSmithKline also has been testing Avandia to try to prevent
diabetes in those at high risk of it, and, in separate studies,
to prevent Alzheimer's disease.
However, the new analysis casts a pall on its prospects for prevention
as well as treatment, many specialists said. The study was led
by Dr. Steven Nissen and statistician Kathy Wolski at the Cleveland
Clinic. Nissen accepts no personal fees for consulting for any
drug makers.
While the analysis doesn't spell out the actual the rate of heart
attacks among Avandia users, the 43 percent excess risk is in
line with what a similar analysis found for lower doses of Vioxx
use, Nissen said. Another context for that number: Heart attack
risks are lowered about 25 percent by cholesterol-reducing statin
drugs — ample reason to prescribe them.
The Avandia studies Nissen analyzed were not designed to look
for heart risks and many of them were so short — some only
24 weeks — that risks may only appear over the longer term,
he said.
Dr. David Nathan, chief of diabetes care at Massachusetts General
Hospital, agreed.
"This analysis is just scratching the surface of what may
be there. It needs to be taken seriously," said Nathan, who
reviewed the paper for the medical journal and has no financial
ties to any diabetes drugmakers.
The situation "reflects very badly on the FDA and on Glaxo,"
Nathan said. "It's the FDA's responsibility to be monitoring
this stuff."
The drug "represents a major failure of the drug-use and
drug-approval processes in the United States," Drs. Bruce
Psaty and Curt Furberg wrote in an editorial in the New England
Journal. Psaty is with the University of Washington in Seattle
and Furberg is with Wake Forest University.
When the drug was approved, evidence of its benefits were "at
best mixed," wrote the two doctors. Both have been frequent
critics of the FDA's failure to spot dangers in the drug approval
process and its conduct involving Vioxx.
Avandia's label already warns about possible heart failure and
other heart problems when taken with insulin. The drug also raises
LDL or bad cholesterol, and can cause fluid retention and weight
gain. Glaxo also has reported some patients suffered more bone
fractures, swelling of the legs and feet, and rare reports of
swelling in the eye that can cause vision problems.
However, in a conference call Monday, Dr. Lawson McCartney who
leads Glaxo's diabetes drug development, said: "We remain
very confident in the safety and of course in the efficacy of
Avandia as an important diabetic medicine."
Dr. Robert J. Meyer of the FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and
Research, also defended the agency's actions, saying information
about risks is not clear-cut.
"We've tried to weigh the risks of going forward with an
uncertain message ... with the level of uncertainty about the
safety signal before us,"
Glaxo's shares trading in the United States closed down $4.53,
or 7.9 percent, at $53.18.
Nissen used publicly available information from an earlier $2.5
million Glaxo settlement with the state of New York to do his
study. He also led earlier research that derailed a similar diabetes
drug, Pargluva, that seemed headed for FDA approval until safety
issues emerged. A fourth drug in the same class, Rezulin, was
withdrawn in 2000 after it was linked to liver problems.
Source: news.yahoo.com
Comments:
About 18 million people in the USA suffer from type 2 diabetes,
and as many as a million of them take the drug Avandia,
because it has been shown to reduce blood sugar by increasing
the body's sensitivity to insulin. This study shows that
the drug Avandia, which supposedly should regulate the blood
sugar level, appears to raise the risk of heart attack by
43% and cardiovascular death by 64%. These findings are
frightening, because two-thirds of diabetics die of heart
problems, so a drug that boosts this possibility is especially
hazardous for these diabetic patients. This study raises
serious questions about the drug approval process by the
FDA. There are a large number of medications to treat type
2 diabetes that give many side effects, however new medications
continue to be approved without conducting any studies showing
safety and health benefits of these drugs over "older"
medications. This is because of the pharmaceutical industry's
pressure on the FDA to expedite approval of new drugs for
profit, not for the health of millions of patients. In chronic
disease like diabetes, the role of synergy of specific cellular
nutrients in regulating blood sugar level and preventing
diabetic complications is critical as it has been proven
by Dr.Rath's research.
Please read more about Dr.Rath's research in diabetes at
http://www.drrathresearch.org/
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