WORLD / Health |
Anti-wrinkle drugs linked to deaths(Agencies)
Updated: 2008-02-09 14:32 Friday's warning came two weeks after the consumer advocacy group Public Citizen petitioned the FDA to strengthen warnings to users of Botox and Myobloc - citing 180 reports of US patients suffering fluid in the lungs, difficulty swallowing or pneumonia, including 16 deaths. Nor is it the first warning. The drugs' labels do warn about the potential for botulinum toxin to spread beyond the injection site and occasionally kill, but the warnings link that side effect to patients with certain neuromuscular diseases, such as myasthenia gravis. That's what's different about these latest cases, said FDA's Katz: The botulism toxin seems to be harming people who don't have that particular risk factor. (Cerebral palsy involves a brain injury, not a disease.) Still, the FDA cautioned that its investigation is in the early stages. It has asked Botox maker Allergan Inc. and Myobloc maker Solstice Neurosciences Inc. to provide additional safety records. Allergan spokeswoman Caroline Van Hove said children with cerebral palsy receive far larger doses injected into their leg muscles than the doses given adults seeking wrinkle care. In a statement, Solstice said it supports FDA's probe but stressed that the agency hasn't concluded the drug poses any new risk. While the FDA said the problems may be related to overdoses, it also has reports of side effects with a variety of doses. Public Citizen's Dr. Sidney Wolfe criticized FDA's warning as falling short. He asked that the agency order a black-box warning, the FDA's strongest type, be put on the drugs' labels and require that every patient receive a pamphlet outlining the risk before each injection. "Every doctor needs to notified about this, every patient needs to be notified," Wolfe said. "Children are showing the way, unfortunately some dead children." He said drug regulators in Britain and Germany last year required that sterner warnings be sent to every doctor in those countries. |
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