CBS/AP/ June 28, 2010, 1:23 PM

Diabetes Drug Avandia Tied to Major Health Risks

A new study led by a federal drug safety expert ties the controversial diabetes drug Avandia to a higher risk of heart problems, strokes and deaths in older adults, and says it is more dangerous than a rival drug, Actos.

The study, a huge review of federal health care records, comes two weeks ahead of a Food and Drug Administration hearing on Avandia's safety. The lead author, Dr. David Graham, is an FDA scientist who wants the pill banned.

As many as 100,000 heart attacks, strokes, deaths and cases of heart failure may be due to Avandia since it came on the market in 1999, Graham said in an interview with The Associated Press.

Harms from Avandia are great enough to "put you in a hospital or in a cemetery," he said.

Editors at the Journal of the American Medical Association rushed to release the study online on Monday, so the information would be available before the July 13-14 hearing, a spokeswoman said.

Avandia is a once-blockbuster drug for Type 2 diabetes, the most common form of the disease and the kind often tied to obesity. Avandia and Actos are pills that help the body make better use of insulin, a key digestive hormone.

The American Heart Association issued a statement reminding patients not to stop taking any medicine without talking with their doctors first. The new study is not definitive enough to prove harm but "deserves serious consideration" and should be discussed between patients and their doctors, the statement says.

Avandia has been under a cloud since May 2007, when a review of dozens of studies suggested it may raise the risk of heart attacks and heart-related deaths. Warnings were added to its label, and the American Diabetes Association told patients to avoid using it until safety questions were resolved.

The FDA and Congress have held meetings on the drug but it has remained on the market, still used by hundreds of thousands of Americans.

In February, a Senate report said that drug maker GlaxoSmithKline knew of possible heart attack risks tied to Avandia, years before such evidence became public.

Read the Finance Committee Report

GlaxoSmithKline PLC maintains that its drug is safe. A spokeswoman said the new study has limitations, and that the company looks forward to a full discussion of evidence at the FDA hearing.

The study involved 227,571 federal health program patients, average age 74, who started on Actos or Avandia from July 2006 through June 2009 and were followed for three years on average.

Avandia patients were 27 percent more likely to suffer strokes, 25 percent more likely to develop heart failure and 14 percent more likely to die than those on Actos, researchers found.

There were 2,593 heart attacks, heart failure cases, strokes and deaths among the 67,593 Avandia users, and 5,386 of those problems among the 159,978 people taking Actos. Just dividing these numbers to compare side effect rates can't be done, though, because people were on the drugs for differing lengths of time.

Unlike studies in younger patients that implicated Avandia, heart attack risks were similar in both groups in the study. Sudden cardiac deaths are much more common in older adults, and whether Avandia affects heart risks differently in older versus younger patients is unknown, the researchers note.

The findings suggest that if 60 people were treated with Avandia for one year, one extra case of heart failure, stroke or death would occur that could have been avoided if they'd taken Actos instead, Graham said.

"The evidence is overwhelming," he said. "There is not a single study where those two drugs are compared where Avandia doesn't look worse than Actos. How many studies do you have to do before you come to your senses?"

The study was observational, with the researchers examining data on patients whose doctors had prescribed Avandia or Actos. That's less rigorous than studies that randomly assign patients to take different drugs, and therefore cannot prove that the drug is riskier.

But Dr. Alvin Powers, a diabetes specialist at Vanderbilt University, called it "important information that's consistent with prior studies," even if it is not definitive. He said he doesn't prescribe Avandia because of uncertainty over its safety.

Another AMA journal, Archives of Internal Medicine, on Monday released online an expanded analysis by the same authors who did the original one in 2007; both suggest higher heart risks for Avandia.

At its hearing next month, the FDA plans to examine the latest safety data and air internal disagreement among its scientists over what should be done.

At the FDA's request, Glaxo began a big study last year comparing heart and stroke risks in patients on Avandia or Actos, made by Japan's Takeda Pharmaceuticals. It aims to enroll thousands of patients, but an editorial in JAMA about the Medicare study says it would be unethical to let the study continue.

The editorial, by Dr. David Juurlink of the University of Toronto, says it is hard to understand why patients and doctors would choose Avandia when a safer alternative exists. He led a previous study of elderly diabetics in Ontario that also found higher risks with Avandia versus Actos.


© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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makemyday2day says:
Only two months ago my former husband died at the age of 56 from a massive heart attack. I knew he was Type 2 diabetic but it wasn't until I was helping my youngest son clear out his Dad's house when I came upon all the medications he'd been taking. I decided to look them all up on WebMD. It was the Avandia that alarmed me most after reading about it. None of the other medications he was taking had any such warnings as this did.

His doctor NEVER should have prescribed this medication. He was overweight, HBP, fairly high cholesterol, and regularly consumed alcohol. I think this is a dangerous drug and likely lead to his premature death. The makers of Avandia can count their lucky stars my son has no intention of suing over this wrongful death. After all, he says, it won't bring his father back. Pretty smart for a 19-yr-old - despite the fact we're still wondering how to pay for his tuition when he starts college this fall!
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m0u5y replies:
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It may not bring him back but this doctor needs to be stopped. If you don't punish people for their crimes, more people can get hurt. If people stop suing for the right reasons then only those who don't deserve money gained from these suits will be getting them, not those who really deserve it. I hope your son isn't using that reason to try and cope, thinking he can forgive, but is actually boiling angry inside. Who knows how far that could drive someone. I know I would have probably said the same thing at his age. I tend to not hold things against people, sometimes though, when what they've done to me is emotionally damaging, I end up just lying to myself about it. From that anger would come hatred, and if I had been the type of person to have the courage to do something drastic, I probably could have, and it would have not ended well. Everyone needs closure, and I just wouldn't be able to see how anyone would be able to get that until the person that irresponsibly killed my husband was punished. There are laws to help with that so that someone doesn't eventually take it into their own hands. It truly makes me angry that there are people sworn to heal, to save people's lives, that instead care nothing about their patients and willfully prescribe them drugs that will kill them only because the Pharma companies pay them every time they do. For everyone who knows what it is like to have lost someone, I think he should think about your family's future, especially now that an integral part of it is missing. It could pay for counseling, it could pay for necessities you may not be able to afford otherwise (I knew a woman who's husband died that early and she lost the house and pretty much everything else) etc...
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sjc_1 says:
What ever happened to the FDA "Safe and effective"? It seems like ever since Dan Quayle and Fen Fen we have had nothing but harmful drugs on the market all for the sake of profit.
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