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Doctors still prescribe diabetes drug despite heart attack warning

A POPULAR diabetes drug is still being prescribed, two months after a safety body recommended its withdrawal amid concerns the drug can increase the risk of heart attacks.

The British Medical Journal (BMJ) called for the immediate withdrawal of rosiglitazone, marketed as Avandia, saying the top-selling drug should never have been licensed.

An investigation revealed the Commission on Human Medicines had advised an expert committee of the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) in July to withdraw the drug, as the "risks of rosiglitazone outweigh its benefits". They said it "no longer has a place on the UK market".

Rosiglitazone, which is manufactured by Glaxo SmithKline (GSK), was approved by the European Medicines Agency (EMA) in 2000 to help lower blood sugar levels in patients with type 2 diabetes.

GSK said its "extensive research" showed the drug was "safe and effective when it was prescribed appropriately". But since its approval, several studies have suggested the drug may lead to a small overall increase in the risk of heart attacks and the BMJ's investigations editor, Dr Deborah Cohen, said the European approval process had not been rigorous enough.

She also raised concerns about the quality of the data used by GSK, the lack of publicly available trial results for independent scientific scrutiny, and failures to act swiftly on emerging safety fears.

The journal said doctors were advising no new patients should start taking the drug and that patients already using rosiglitazone should review their options. Those at higher risk of heart disease should be advised to stop taking it.

Professor Nick Freemantle, of the University of Birmingham, called for an overhaul in the standards of regulatory trials, saying: "In order to learn from our mistakes, we must improve the quality of safety data from clinical trials on all new health care interventions, not just antidiabetic drugs."

Professor John Yudkin, of University College London, said: "Ten years after the release of rosiglitazone, we still cannot accurately quantify the harm to which we were exposing our patients. We need to be absolutely certain that our long-term treatments for type 2 diabetes are not causing the very harm they are meant to prevent.

"And if the regulatory bodies do not insist on clear evidence of greater benefit than harm, they are failing in their basic purpose."

Clinical pharmacologist Dr Yoon Loke, of the University of East Anglia, told tonight's BBC's Panorama programme, which also investigated the issue, that the drug could have caused an extra 1,000 heart attacks and about 600 extra cases of heart failure in the UK last year.

The MHRA told the programme it has sent a letter to doctors advising them to "consider alternative treatments where appropriate".

GSK told the programme: "We have carried out an extensive research programme, involving more than 50,000 patients, to analyse the safety and benefits of Avandia and continue to believe it is safe and effective when it is prescribed appropriately."


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Monday 13 February 2012

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