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FDA aware of diabetes pill Avandia's safety issue
www.chinaview.cn 2007-05-24 10:19:24
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Nine months ago, the drug company Glaxo-SmithKline posted a study along with dozens of others on an obscure company website. The study indicated that the company's blockbuster diabetes drug, Avandia, raised patients' heart disease risk by 30%. At about the same time, company officials say, they told the Food and Drug Administration what they had found.

In 2006, the FDA added a new warning about a potential increase in heart attacks in patients taking the diabetes drug Avandia. New trials shook medical experts because the drug is so widely used. (File Photo)

    BEIJING, May 24 (Xinhuanet) -- 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, according to media reports Thursday.

    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    However, other published and unpublished data from long-term clinical trials of Avandia, including an interim analysis of data from the RECORD trial (a large, ongoing, randomized open label trial) and unpublished reanalyses of data from DREAM (a previously conducted placebo-controlled, randomized trial) provide contradictory evidence about the risks in patients treated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.

    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 based on signals seen in previous controlled clinical trials of Avandia alone and in combination with other drugs, and from postmarketing reports.

   (Agencies)

Editor: Yangtze Yan
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