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Diabetes Drug Should Stay
Despite Heart Risks, U.S. Advisers Say
New York -
The widely prescribed type 2 diabetes drug Avandia should remain on
the market, despite studies that suggest it could increase the risk
of heart attacks, U.S. health advisers said Monday.
The U.S. Food and Drug
Administration advisory panel voted 22-1 to keep the drug on the
market, although it recommended Avandia should carry new safety
warnings. That vote was preceded by another vote, 20-3, in which
panel members agreed that available data does show Avandia increases
heart risks.
"The committee felt, almost
uniformly, that there is a risk to some patients," said Dr. Clifford
Rosen, the acting committee chairman from the Maine Center for
Osteoporosis, St. Joseph Hospital, in Bangor.
"There was some increased risk of
cardiac events to some patients. The signal for increased risk was
there, with some qualifications," he told reporters at a
teleconference.
Patients at risk include those with
congestive heart failure, heart disease or patients using insulin,
Rosen said, adding, "There are clear-cut reasons not to prescribe
this drug to certain patients."
But the decision to keep the drug
on the market, according to an FDA official, came about because the
committee wasn't convinced that the data presented about the risk
was conclusive.
"If we have a clear answer, we
don't take this to an advisory committee," Dr. Robert Meyer, the
director of the FDA's Office of Evaluation II, Center for Drug
Evaluation and Research, told reporters.
Dr. Gerald Dal Pan, director of the
FDA's Office of Surveillance and Epidemiology, said, "We will go
back and formulate what we think should be on the label." Panelists'
suggestions included a black box warning or other warning for heart
attack, but there was no consensus on how the label should be
changed, he said.
The FDA had previously asked the
drug's manufacturer, GlaxoSmithKline, to add a black box warning
about heart failure.
While the FDA isn't bound to follow
the recommendations of its advisory panels, it typically does so.
Following the vote, Glaxo issued a
statement from Dr. Ronald Krall, the company's chief medical
officer. "We welcome this decision as positive for patients. This
was the first opportunity for these scientific experts to review the
full data behind Avandia," he said. "The committee recognized the
debilitating nature of this disease and the importance of multiple
treatment options. Diabetes is a progressive disease that exacts a
terrible toll on its victims, and it is important that Avandia
remain a treatment option for patients."
Concerns about Avandia (rosiglitazone),
part of a class of drugs for diabetes called thiazolidinediones, are
based on a meta-analysis of published studies that suggested the
drug increases the risk of heart attack by 43 percent.
That finding was first published
May 21 in the New England Journal of Medicine, in a paper
co-authored by Dr. Steven Nissen, chairman of cardiovascular
medicine at the Cleveland Clinic and one of the earliest critics of
the arthritis drug Vioxx, which was withdrawn from the market in
2004 due to heart attack concerns.
Dr. Larry Deeb, president for
medicine and science at the American Diabetes Association, said
before Monday's vote that he believes Avandia should continue to be
available to diabetics because the increased risk of heart attack
has not been proven conclusively.
"A decision to do something should
not be based on a nebulous risk," Deeb said. "There probably should
be a warning on the box, because there is enough concern."
Deeb believes the FDA should call
for a study to thoroughly review any heart risks associated with the
drug's use. "It's premature to withdraw the drug. I am anxious about
pulling [a drug] that has done some good off the market based on a
meta-analysis," he added.
Dr. Sidney Wolfe, director of
Public Citizen's Health Research Group, who has previously spoken
out against Avandia, was among the speakers at the hearing. "Does
the overall risk-benefit profile of Avandia support its continued
marketing in the United States? The answer is clearly no," he said
in a prepared statement.
According to Wolfe's prepared
testimony, FDA adverse-reaction reports filed since Avandia hit the
market in 1999 have shown the drug had a 15.2 times higher adjusted
rate of heart failure than did the older diabetes drug Glucotrol.
The adjusted rate of liver toxicity with Avandia was 9.5 times
higher, and 14.8 times higher for liver failure, he said.
"There is no evidence of any
uniquely beneficial clinical outcome for Avandia and growing
evidence of unique risks in multiple organ systems," Wolfe said. "If
Avandia were up for approval today, based on what is now known, it
would be summarily rejected. There should not be a double standard
for removing it from the market."
For its part, Avandia's maker,
GlaxoSmithKline, insisted before the meeting that the drug does not
increase the risk of heart attack. "We don't believe that a warning
about heart attack should be on the label," said Dr. Andy Zambanini,
director of clinical development at GlaxoSmithKline.
"Avandia is one of the most studied
medicines in the diabetes field," Zambanini said. "We have looked at
all the available data both from short-term trials, long-term trials
and real-world data, in terms of epidemiology. There is really no
evidence of an increase in cardiovascular death with Avandia. And
when you look at Avandia and compare it with all the other similar
agents, there really is no difference in heart attack risk."
One of the studies that
GlaxoSmithKline is relying on to make its case is the RECORD (Rosiglitazone
Evaluated for Cardiac Outcomes and Regulation of Glycemia in
Diabetes) trial. The study, sponsored by Glaxo, was specifically
designed to determine the risks for heart attack from Avandia.
Dr. David Graham, associate
director for science and medicine in the FDA's Office of
Surveillance and Epidemiology and an Avandia critic, disagreed with
Glaxo's interpretation of the RECORD study. In a report submitted by
the FDA to the advisory panel before the hearing, Graham concluded:
"RECORD does not now, nor will it
at completion, provide meaningful evidence to demonstrate with any
degree of certainty that RSG [Avandia] does not increase the risk of
acute myocardial infarction [heart attack] or sudden death, or the
APTC outcome. The biased design of RECORD renders it useless as an
objective measure of Avandia's cardiovascular safety."
Zambanini countered by saying that
the RECORD study has seen very few cardiac deaths. "To say that this
study is of no value isn't true," he said.
During Monday's testimony, Graham
was supported by his boss, Dal Pan, who said the risks posed by
Avandia outweighed the benefits.
But another agency official, Dr.
Robert Meyer, head of the FDA office that reviews new diabetes
drugs, urged panel members to keep an open mind about Avandia, the
AP reported.
"It is important that the committee
understand there is a fundamental disagreement within (the FDA's
drugs office) on the scientific conclusions that should be drawn,"
Meyer said.
That rift revealed a division
between FDA officials responsible for approving new medicines and
those who monitor their safety once on the market, the AP said.
More than 2 million people
worldwide take Avandia for type 2 diabetes, the most common form of
diabetes in which the body doesn't produce enough of the hormone
insulin or cells ignore the insulin, leading to a buildup of blood
sugar that can pose a range of health risks. Obesity is often a
cause of type 2 diabetes. The drug generates $3.2 billion in annual
sales for GlaxoSmithKline.
Currently, there is a warning on
Avandia's label that it increases the risk of another cardiovascular
problem called congestive heart failure, a chronic condition caused
by the heart's failure to pump normally, allowing fluid to build up
in the body.
In May, the FDA said it wanted a
stronger warning about the risk of heart failure on Avandia's label.
Glaxo is "still in negotiation with the FDA about a new warning
label on heart failure and we expect to release that information
soon," Zambanini said.
Critics of the drug contend there
are alternatives to Avandia that don't have the same risk for heart
failure or heart attack They include metformin, Actos, Amaryl,
Glyburide and others.--
HealthDay
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