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U.S. Restricts, EU Bans Controversial Diabetes Pill

MATTHEW PERRONE   09/23/10 05:18 PM ET   AP

Avandia Banned

European regulators ordered the diabetes drug Avandia off the market and the Food and Drug Administration placed stringent restrictions on its use in the United States, saying heart attack risks associated with the former blockbuster are too great a safety concern to continue its use for most people.

In simultaneous news briefings Thursday, the European Medicines Agency and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration announced their long-awaited decisions on the fate of GlaxoSmithKline's controversial drug. The European regulator said it would stop authorizing marketing of Avandia, which will be banned from sales within the next few months.

The FDA said new patients will be able to get a prescription for Avandia, but only if they can't control their blood sugar with other medications. Doctors will have to document that their patients are eligible to receive the drug and have been briefed on its risks. FDA expects the restricted plan "will limit use of Avandia significantly."

The two decisions will virtually eliminate use of the drug around the world, said Dr. Steve Nissen of the Cleveland Clinic.

"To prescribe this drug in the U.S., you now have to certify that the patient has tried every other diabetes drug, and there are no patients who only respond to Avandia," said Nissen, who published the first paper linking Avandia to heart risks.

While there are more than a dozen diabetes drugs on the market, only Actos from Japan-based Takeda Pharmaceuticals works the same way as Avandia. U.S sales of Actos have risen steadily – hitting $3.4 billion last year – as Avandia's reputation has soured. Global sales of Avandia have fallen from a peak of $3.2 billion in 2006 to $1.2 billion last year.

In the U.S., more than 2.6 million patients filled prescriptions for Avandia last year, and some experts worry that those currently taking the drug may continue using it despite the risk of heart attack.

Anyone already taking Avandia will need to sign a waiver saying that they understand the drug's risks. But Dr. Harlan Krumholz of Yale University says patients may not understand they are still at risk even if they feel good.

"Asking a patient, 'Are you doing well on this medication?' isn't an adequate assessment of whether the drug is increasing their risk. It's a silent risk. They don't feel the risk," Krumholz said.

The safety of Avandia, the brand name for rosiglitazone, has been the top drug safety controversy facing the FDA in recent years. FDA's critics have framed the Avandia decision as a key test of the agency's Obama-appointed leadership, who vowed to bolster the agency's regulatory stance after a series of drug safety problems under the previous administration.

FDA Commissioner Margaret Hamburg said the decision reflects the agency's unique powers to restrict access to medications.

"We are taking somewhat different strategies, but both strategies are designed to assure the goals of safety," Hamburg said in a briefing with reporters.

But critics say the agency had a responsibility to act much sooner. Senate investigators concluded earlier this year that the FDA was informed in 2005 of Avandia's heart risks – two years before it made those risks public. The same investigators concluded GlaxoSmithKline began hiding evidence about Avandia's risks soon after it came on the market.

"This unfortunate decision sends a signal to industry that this Food and Drug Administration is incapable of removing a drug from the market," said Paul Thacker, who led the Senate Finance Committee's investigation into the handling of Avandia. "I have a hard time imagining another drug where more negative evidence has piled up."

GlaxoSmithKline said in a statement Thursday it will voluntarily stop promoting Avandia in all countries where it operates.

The decision marks the second time in three years that the agency has decided to leave Avandia on the market, despite mounting pressure from outside medical experts, politicians and some of its own scientists.

The FDA first approved the drug in 1999 and it became the top-selling diabetes pill in the world by 2006. But use has plummeted since a 2007 analysis linked the drug to heart attack risks.

The European Commission still must approve the recommendations by the European Medicines Agency, a process that could take several weeks. Decisions by the health regulators usually are not challenged.

Dr. Hans-Georg Eichler, the agency's senior medical officer, said the two groups of regulators shared data and other information in reviewing the drug's safety.

"We're operating in different health care environments, we have different legal frameworks and we had different starting points," he said in explaining the contrast in action taken by the agencies. "In Europe, we already had a very restricted indication for this drug so we both concluded that in the context of our environments, these are the best ways forward."

The FDA's decision essentially concurs with the opinion outside experts reached earlier this year.

In July, a 33-member panel of medical experts voted 20-12 to keep Avandia available in the U.S. Of the 20 who voted to keep it on the market, 10 said it should only be available on a limited basis. The FDA is not required to follow the group's advice, though it often does.

___

AP Medical Writer Maria Cheng reported from London, AP Health Writer Linda A. Johnson reported from Trenton, N.J., and AP Medical Writer Lauran Neergaard reported from Washington.

___

On the Web:

http://www.fda.gov/NewsEvents/Newsroom/PressAnnouncements/ucm226975.htm

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European regulators ordered the diabetes drug Avandia off the market and the Food and Drug Administration placed stringent restrictions on its use in the United States, saying heart attack risks assoc...
European regulators ordered the diabetes drug Avandia off the market and the Food and Drug Administration placed stringent restrictions on its use in the United States, saying heart attack risks assoc...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
vippy
Carpe Diem!
03:12 PM on 09/24/2010
Once again, big pharma is not your friend.  85% of meds don't even work I read yesterday.  But people
love to run to the doctor because they lack common sense and then they think that a pill cures everything.  Ever listened to the side effects of some pills,worse than the initial ailment.  Did anyone tell you that the Number One Killer in meds are the ASPIRINS?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
krissymax
11:12 AM on 09/24/2010
The FDA is so royally incompetent. Concerning this very issue Time Magazine had an article "Is FDA on Drugs?" which detailed how FDA is in bed with BigPharma and just can't quit them. FDA's first duty is to BigPharma and the citizens are an after thought. If Avandia isn't enough proof. See Meridia another drug banned by the European Medicines Agency, not FDA. See also Vioxx, Bextra, and Redzulin all banned finally by FDA. With Redzulin, the FDA Medical Officer assigned thought that it was unsafe pre-approval citing too many liver failure deaths etc. He was immediately pulled off the project. It was approved by FDA, then two years later had to be withdrawn (banned) because of too many liver failure deaths. Why? Because FDA relies almost exclusively on clinical studies created by the drug maker. Gee I wonder if they have a vested interest in the outcome??? I am stunned by FDA incompetence and failures, in my opinion, FDA's tremendous lack of oversight and enforcement has led to the death of literally millions of Americans. And even up to today - they still don't get it. Even one of FDA committee recommended withdrawal of Avandia. FDA's number one job should be to protect the public not BigPharma profits.
09:25 AM on 09/24/2010
More insanity from the FDA (For a Drugged America).
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Chas53
07:26 AM on 09/24/2010
The vast majority folks that have Type II diabetes can be CURED by adhering to a plant-based, whole foods diet as espoused by Joel Fuhrman MD in his book "Eat for Health".
Refined sugar food and drinks are fueling the obesity epidemic and the resultant metabolic syndrome. Truly, these are "food borne illnesses". Taking drugs to "treat" them is insane. They are merely palliative and as seen with Avandia, they can cause significant, collateral damage.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
onionboy
Blessed are the Cheese Makers
08:58 PM on 09/23/2010
Today it's "the EU took it off the market, why don't we?"

10-15 years ago it was "Europe has so many more drugs available than we do, so many more options. The FDA is keeping us from life-saving therapies."

We are one fickle country. I'll also note that the FDA restricted it to a last line drug. That is to say it it only to be used in patients where metformin, etc. don't work. If there are such patients, and they are willing to accept the heart risks to control their diabetes, they should be able to do it. We shouldn't pull the drug from their current use if it's all that can work for them. That's my opinion.

Can doctor's prescribe it beyond the FDA limitation? That's their professional privilege, but they should be held responsible. Similarly if GSK is found marketing in anyway beyond the restrictions, they should have the hammer brought down.

There's a lot of nasty stuff pharma does, no question, but we shouldn't make patients suffer in our anger over their avarice.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
ConfuciusSay-
Aglets: their purpose is sinister.
12:31 AM on 09/24/2010
Seems like a reasonable approach. If the total patient base is kept small, there will be hopefully minimal incidents of bad stuff. Of course if my relatives were on this medicine, they would be strongly encouraged to get another opinion.
07:41 PM on 09/23/2010
Uuuuuh, see. Typical liberals. Clearly from reading the article, the free market is taking care of Avandia just fine. Pharms don't go from $3.2B in revenue to $1.2B in revenue and keep a drug on the market voluntarily. But, I guess you have to keep the regulators paid.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
06:08 PM on 09/23/2010
This is classic post Clinton FDA. Do not protect patients when there are 13 other medications available out there such as Actos, Metaformin, that have been proven safe and less side effects for a patented money maker to keep its current patients billions in profits on a drug before it goes out of patent. Typically they pull the drug off the market for side effects like heart attacks after the 6th year is up and so it would have gone generic anyway--and Novartis knows that they can lawyer up that maybe the diabetes caused your heart attack..the biggest laguher is that half of these medicaionts are needed due to side effects of the new wave of bipolar medications like Seroquel etc. that are billion dollar drugs, then you need to add Avandia which causes weight gain and heart attacks, then you better take something for the nausea the Avandia causes and maybe some Adderall for the weight gain caused by a drug supposed to help diabetes--isnt that a sign the drug is a non-starter it causes weight gain which makes diabetes worse. Big Pharma is only slightly less evil than Big Health Insurance. As long as we allow the health of our citizens to be subjected to the whims of FOR PROFIT COMPANIES in an area as dire as our nation's health we are a nation of idiots!
layman
Live and Let Live !
05:19 PM on 09/23/2010
Big pharm drugs are much more deadlly that the disease They claim to cure you but instead killing you !
layman
Live and Let Live !
05:14 PM on 09/23/2010
Evil Big Pharm sucking blood, killing people for profit.
04:11 PM on 09/23/2010
Hey HIV patients, its not the HIV that will end your life... it's the drugs.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
confuseddemocrat
04:21 PM on 09/23/2010
not true

the medications prevent the virus from devouring your immune system.  Patients with unmanaged HIV usually succumb to secondary infections by other viruses or fungi

And BTW what does this have to do with this article?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
06:13 PM on 09/23/2010
Because most HiV Meds cause diabetes, weight gain and obesity so then they all need to go on Avandia, the cause depression, putem on Seroquel--causes diabetes too...wow great now they need a cocktail, plus Avandia and they wonder why the morbidity from HIV is now mainly caused by HEART FAILURE GENIUS! Educate yourself or do not bother to try to educate others here.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
ConfuciusSay-
Aglets: their purpose is sinister.
11:54 PM on 09/23/2010
What rot.
04:09 PM on 09/23/2010
It's wise for Americans to ALWAYS check which medications are banned in the EU and avoid those at ALL costs.  The US is about profit. If a medication has a side effect, that's just considered a reason to give you another medication to resolve that issue on top of the pre-existing one.  Keeps the you perpetually medicated and a paying customer.  Ending with a profit to the funeral home.
ThatsTheTheWayItIs
religion, ideology, partisanship are delusional
04:23 PM on 09/23/2010
Better idea: if you are basically healthy, don't take any prescription drug that does not cure you, that you take for life. None of them are actually effective, including stations.

And ignore the drug ads, don't "ask your doctor". They get paid for every script they write.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
edgarcaycedoc
05:24 PM on 09/23/2010
I cannot take statins, because they gave me Rhabdomyolisis (SP??). But in a delightful little serendipity, the doctor put me on niacin, which has proven to be far more effective for me than statins anyway!
04:02 PM on 09/23/2010
This poison has been FDA approved for 11 years, and now they're approving genetically modified salmon. I wish they'd label everything that the FDA approved, in big letters, so I'd know what products to avoid. Once again, the EU exhibits true concern for its people, rather than corporations.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michael Mouton
04:10 PM on 09/23/2010
From a rap song: "Hos gotta make their money too." And in this case the hos are drug companies.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KataVideo
03:56 PM on 09/23/2010
more big pharma garbage doing more harm than good.
03:50 PM on 09/23/2010
if the "side effect" disclosure at the end of the commercial takes longer than the actual ad....

...dont take the drug
04:10 PM on 09/23/2010
So true.  I caught this the other day.  The "lifestyle" was 15 seconds.  The remaining 45 seconds were warnings of side effects.
ThatsTheTheWayItIs
religion, ideology, partisanship are delusional
04:26 PM on 09/23/2010
Check out the side effects for Stephen Colbert's Prescott Pharm line:

http://www.nofactzone.net/2008/09/13/cheating-death-with-dr-stephen-t-colbert-dfa/
03:49 PM on 09/23/2010
i bet glaxo's lobbyists are flustered by this one