In the month after a surprising analysis revealed possible heart risks from
the blockbuster diabetes drug Avandia, reports of side effects to federal
regulators tripled.
Moncef Slaoui,, chairman of Research and Development at
GalaxoSmithKline testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington, in this
Wednesday, June 6, 2007 file photo, before the House Oversight and
Government Reform committee hearing on the diabetes drug Avandia.
[AP]
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The sudden spike is a sign that
doctors probably were unaware of the drug's possible role in their patients'
heart problems and therefore may not have reported many such cases in the past,
several experts said.
It also shows the flaws of the safety tracking system and suggests that a
better one might have detected a potential problem before the drug had been on
the market for eight years.
Avandia is used to control blood sugar, helping more than 6 million people
worldwide manage Type 2 diabetes, the kind that is linked to obesity. These
people already are at higher risk for heart attacks, so news that the drug might
raise this risk by 43 percent was especially disturbing.
In the 35 days after May 21, when the New England Journal of Medicine
published the analysis on the Internet, reports of heart attacks, deaths and
hospitalizations leaped. The sharp rise in reports of heart problems appears in
data obtained by The Associated Press through a Freedom of Information Act
request to the federal Food and Drug Administration.
Only five heart attacks were reported in the 35 days before the study,
compared with 90 in the same period afterward. Heart-related hospitalizations
went from 11 to 126. The reports involve rosiglitazone, sold as Avandia and
Avandamet.
Reporting a drug's side effects is voluntary, and only a crude indication
rather than a scientific measure of how many problems patients are actually
having. The FDA relies on this unenforced system once a drug is on the market.
Critics say it leads to haphazard oversight in which problems can be missed
because doctors don't connect the dots between a drug and symptoms they see in
an individual patient.
With Avandia, the published analysis likely led to more cases being reported,
said Vanderbilt University diabetes specialist Dr. Alvin C. Powers.
"Now, patients and their doctors are much more aware of the possible link
between Avandia and cardiovascular disease. This is good - this is going to help
us going forward to determine whether or not this drug is safe," he said.
The drug's manufacturer, British-based GlaxoSmithKline PLC, insists that the
drug is safe and effective.
"This is a very well-known phenomenon," where news reports lead to increased
reporting, said company spokeswoman Mary Anne Rhyne. "It's good that there's
awareness of the reporting system, but drawing conclusions on such data is
inappropriate."
The FDA plans hearings on safety concerns about the drug on July 30. In the
meantime, diabetes experts have advised users of the medication to talk to their
doctors and not to immediately discontinue it.
The side effects reported range from as minor as a blister to as serious as
sudden cardiac death. Most of the reports the AP reviewed seemed to involve
serious side effects, and rosiglitazone was listed by the FDA as the "primary
suspect" rather than other medicines the patient may have been taking.
There was a total of only 50 adverse event reports in January and 73 in
February. From April 16 to May 21, when the study was published, 121 events were
reported, including 11 deaths. In the 35 days after the study, 357 events were
reported, including 38 deaths.
"You really can't infer anything about incidence rates from that," because
the spike in reports is likely due to the "publicity effect" of the study, said
Dr. David Graham, an FDA drug safety expert.
Dr. David Nathan, chief of diabetes care at Massachusetts General Hospital,
agreed, saying it was "not conceivable" that only five people among the 1
million Americans taking Avandia had heart attacks in the month preceding the
May 21 study, as the FDA reports suggest.
"It just heightens the concern about the poor reporting we have," said
Nathan, who has received speaker fees from Glaxo and other drug companies.
Powers and Graham have no financial ties to any diabetes drug makers.
The issue has roiled the medical community and sparked congressional probes
into whether the FDA is properly investigating safety issues. The FDA issued a
"safety alert" about the drug only after the May 21 study came out, even though
Glaxo had informed the agency of its own analysis of heart risks nearly a year
beforehand and possibly as early as 2005.
Avandia's label 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.