The
U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is aware of a potential safety
issue related to Avandia (rosiglitazone), a drug approved to treat type
2 diabetes. Safety data from controlled clinical trials have shown that
there is a potentially significant increase in the risk of heart attack
and heart-related deaths in patients taking Avandia. However, other published
and unpublished data from long-term clinical trials of Avandia, including
an interim analysis of data from the RECORD trial (a large, ongoing, randomized
open label trial) and unpublished reanalyses of data from DREAM (a previously
conducted placebo-controlled, randomized trial) provide contradictory
evidence about the risks in patients treated with Avandia.
Patients who are taking Avandia, especially those who are known to have
underlying heart disease or who are at high risk of heart attack should
talk to their doctor about this new information as they evaluate the available
treatment options for their type 2 diabetes.
FDA's analyses of all available data are ongoing. FDA has not confirmed
the clinical significance of the reported increased risk in the context
of other studies. Pending questions include whether the other approved
treatment from the same class of drugs, pioglitazone, has less, the same
or greater risks. Furthermore, there is inherent risk associated with
switching patients with diabetes from one treatment to another even in
the absence of specific risks associated with particular treatments. For
these reasons, FDA is not asking GlaxoSmithKline, the drug's sponsor,
to take any specific action at this time. FDA is providing this emerging
information to prescribers so that they, and their patients, can make
individualized treatment decisions.
"FDA remains committed to assuring that doctors and patients have
the latest information available to make treatment and medication use
decisions. In this case, FDA is carefully weighing several complex sources
of data, some of which show conflicting results, related to the risk of
heart attack and heart-related deaths in patients treated with Avandia,"
said Steven Galson, M.D., M.P.H., director of FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation
and Research. "We will complete our analyses and make the results
available as soon as possible. FDA will take the issue of cardiovascular
risk associated with Avandia and other drugs in this class to an Advisory
Committee as soon as one can be convened."
Avandia was approved in 1999 for treatment of type 2 diabetes, a serious
and life threatening disease that affects about 18 to 20 million Americans.
Diabetes is a leading cause of coronary heart disease, blindness, kidney
failure and limb amputation. Since the drug was approved, FDA has been
monitoring several heart-related adverse events (e.g., fluid retention,
edema and congestive heart failure) based on signals seen in previous
controlled clinical trials of Avandia alone and in combination with other
drugs, and from postmarketing reports. FDA has updated the product's labeling
on several occasions to reflect these new data, most recently in 2006.
The most recent labeling change for Avandia also included a new warning
about a potential increase in heart attacks and heart-related chest pain
in some individuals using Avandia. This new warning was based on the result
of a controlled clinical trial in patients with existing congestive heart
failure.
Recently, the manufacturer of Avandia provided FDA with a pooled analysis
(meta analysis) of 42 randomized, controlled clinical trials in which
Avandia was compared to either placebo or other anti-diabetic therapies
in patients with type 2 diabetes. The pooled analysis suggested that patients
receiving short-term (most studies were 6-months duration) treatment with
Avandia may have a 30-40 percent greater risk of heart attack and other
heart-related adverse events than patients treated with placebo or other
anti-diabetic therapy. These data, if confirmed, would be of significant
concern since patients with diabetes are already at an increased risk
of heart disease.
Avandia is manufactured by GlaxoSmithKline, which is based in Research
Triangle Park, N.C.
SOURCE FDA News
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