CLEVELAND,
May 21 /PRNewswire/ -- A drug commonly used to treat patients with type
2 diabetes mellitus, raises patients' risk of heart attack and cardiovascular
death, according to an analysis completed by the Chairman of Cardiovascular
Medicine at Cleveland Clinic.
In an analysis of 42 trials, Steven Nissen, M.D., found that use of the
drug rosiglitazone (Avandia(TM)) raises patients' risk of heart attack
and cardiovascular death by 43% and 64%, respectively, in comparison to
the use of a placebo or other anti-diabetic therapies. The findings represent
a
particular public health concern because more than 65% of the deaths amongst
diabetic patients are attributed to heart disease.
Dr. Nissen's manuscript was posted on-line by the New England Journal
of Medicine at 5 pm today and will subsequently appear in the print version
of the journal. His co-author is Cleveland Clinic statistician Kathy Wolski.
"The results of this analysis raise serious concerns about the cardiovascular
safety of rosiglitazone," Dr. Nissen said. "While our study
was limited by lack of access to original source data, which would have
enabled time-to-event analysis, patients and providers should consider
the potential for serious adverse cardiovascular effects of treatment
with mrosiglitazone for type 2 diabetes."
Rosiglitazone was approved for use by the Food and Drug Administration
in 1999, based on the drug's ability to lower blood glucose and reduce
glycohemoglobin levels. Since then, approximately 60 million prescriptions
have been issued and several million patients currently take the drug.
Rosiglitazone is one of the primary therapies used to lower blood sugar
in patients with type 2 diabetes. "However, the objective of lowering
blood sugar is the reduction of the complications of diabetes," Dr.
Nissen explains. "The effect of anti-diabetic therapy on cardiovascular
outcomes is of critical importance because cardiovascular disease represents
the overwhelming source of diabetic mortality. Unfortunately, rosiglitazone
appears to increase, rather than decrease, the most serious complication
of diabetes, heart disease."
In the 42 studies comprising the analysis, 15,560 patients were randomized
to regimens including rosiglitazone and 12,283 were assigned to comparator
groups that did not. Patients were relatively young, averaging less than
57 years of age for both treatment groups and there was a moderate male
predominance (53-61%). Cleveland Clinic, located in Cleveland, Ohio, is
a not-for-profit multispecialty academic medical center that integrates
clinical and
hospital care with research and education. Cleveland Clinic was founded
in 1921 by four renowned physicians with a vision of providing outstanding
patient care based upon the principles of cooperation, compassion and
innovation. U.S. News & World Report consistently names Cleveland
Clinic as one of the nation's best hospitals in its annual "America's
Best Hospitals"
survey. Approximately 1,800 full-time salaried physicians and researchers
at Cleveland Clinic and Cleveland Clinic Florida represent more than 100
medical specialties and subspecialties. In 2005, there were 2.9 million
outpatient visits to Cleveland Clinic. Patients came for treatment from
every state and from more than 80 countries. There were nearly 54,000
hospital admissions to Cleveland Clinic in 2005. Cleveland Clinic's Web
site address is http://www.clevelandclinic.org.
SOURCE Cleveland Clinic
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