Out with the new, in with the old.


In 2011, there was a continuation of trends from the past few years toward increasing emphasis on drug safety by the FDA. Unfortunately, the wrong aspects are being emphasized.

We are seeing an expansion of the tendency to emphasize rare untoward events while overlooking the potential for much more frequent untoward events of the agents under review — or of comparable agents already approved — or of the disease state itself. This obsession with the rare and the new began with the controversy regarding excess coronary heart disease risk with rosiglitazone (Avandia, GlaxoSmithKline) and has spread inexorably into most clinical issues touching the diabetes and endocrinology arena.

Indeed, whereas the FDA does not regard prediabetes as an approvable disease entity and considers obesity an entity even more remotely related to diabetes, there seems to have developed a tendency to include CHD assessments into the profile of anti-obesity agents. Thus, the three recently submitted and reviewed anti-obesity agents considered at advisory boards were heavily scrutinized for potential excess CHD risk, and overall approval was granted to none of these agents by their respective advisory boards.

Although the agency has yet to act to produce final decisions regarding the approval or approvability of these drugs, it is clear that there is tremendous reluctance to clear them as long as there is a scintilla of skepticism regarding the existence of any adverse consequence of these agents. Of course, the rampant near-epidemic spread of obesity worldwide seems not to have affected these discussions in any measured manner. This indicates a clear imbalance between the occurrence of rare adverse effects of agents compared with the demonstration of widespread benefits with respect to the specific diseases for which they seek approval. In this instance, the rare trumps the widespread.

In the case of antidiabetic drugs, 2011 saw an FDA advisory board become obsessed with an imbalance of nine excess cases of breast cancer and nine excess cases of bladder cancer in the database of the first of a new class of oral antidiabetic agents — the SGLT2 inhibitors. Although this imbalance was not statistically significant, it became almost the principal focus of the advisory board’s discussions and crowded out needed discussions in other areas, such as potential adverse effects on bone and kidney function.

Moreover, this agent had clear and evident benefits with respect not only to glucose control, but also an absence of hypoglycemia and some weight loss rather than the more usual weight gain. Thus, there is much to recommend this agent as an addition to the existing antidiabetic armamentarium.

The absence of hypoglycemia is often given short shrift in the evaluation of medications for type 2 diabetes because many believe that hypoglycemic episodes are rare with type 2 patients and are limited to patients taking insulin, especially intensive, complex basal-bolus regimens. Nothing could be further from the truth. In the ADOPT study, patients taking glyburide had a 39% total rate of hypoglycemia during the study. This was dismissed as the fault of glyburide, which is widely thought to have a high rate of hypoglycemia, unlike the other sulfonylureas.

More recently, we saw in the ADVANCE study that a mild sulfonylurea, gliclazide — thought to have a very low rate of hypoglycemia — produced an overall rate of 52% hypoglycemia, and severe hypoglycemia was associated with a tripling of mortality and of major adverse coronary events. This, too, seems to have been minimized in the minds of many, and the use of sulfonylureas continues undeterred.

Late in 2011 came the stunning report by Budnitz and colleagues in The New England Journal of Medicine showing that antidiabetic drugs are the second most frequent class of agents producing ED visits for adverse drug effects.

Because this study was performed using the Medicare population, it is unlikely that there were many type 1 diabetic patients and that the use of sulfonylureas was likely to be substantial. We may, therefore, conclude that the weight of evidence suggests that hypoglycemia in type 2 patients is not only undesirable, but is also lethal and expensive to deal with in the ED.

This nullifies any advantage of lower drug costs with generic sulfonylureas; makes the approval of therapies free of hypoglycemia almost mandatory; and suggests that the FDA consider the adverse effects of competing existing therapies when evaluating new therapies for complex and highly prevalent disease states such as diabetes.

We can only hope that 2012 will bring these changes.

Source: Endocrine Today.

 

 

Animal fat, cholesterol increased risk for gestational diabetes.


Women who took in higher amounts of animal fat and cholesterol before pregnancy were at higher risk for gestational diabetes, according to researchers from the epidemiology branch at the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.

The prospective study included 13,475 women participating in the Nurses’ Health Study II who had a pregnancy between 1991 and 2001. Among these women, 860 reported incidence of gestational diabetes. Dietary intake was measured by a questionnaire that was given every 4 years.

Saturated fat intake was correlated with intakes of trans fat and monounsaturated fat. Monounsaturated fat intake was also correlated with intakes of trans fat and polyunsaturated fat. Diets with increasing intake of total fat, dietary cholesterol and animal fat were associated with higher BMI, increased meat and protein intake, decreased alcohol consumption and decreased cereal fiber intake.

In fully adjusted models, higher intakes of total fat, saturated fat and trans fat were not associated with gestational diabetes risk. After adjustment for nondietary covariates, total fat was associated with significantly increased risk for gestational diabetes.

Animal fat intake was significantly and positively associated with gestational diabetes risk. Those in the highest quintile of animal fat intake had approximately a 90% increased risk for gestational diabetes after adjustment for nondietary risk factors. Also, after adjustment for nondietary risk factors, higher intake of cholesterol was significantly associated with gestational diabetes.

“More research to confirm these findings and to decipher underlying molecular mechanisms is warranted,” the researchers wrote. “However, these findings underline the potential importance of considering the fatty acid content of diet in dietary recommendations for the prevention of gestational diabetes.”

Source: Endocrine Today.

 

 

Trans-fatty acid levels decreased in whites after FDA regulation.


Levels of four trans-fatty acids decreased by more than half in whites from 2000 to 2009, according to data culled from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey.

Researchers from several sites in the United States aimed to evaluate the effect on changes in FDA regulations in 2003 that required information on trans-fatty acids to appear on the nutrition label of food and dietary supplements. They evaluated NHANES data from 2000 and 2009 to estimate whether trans-fatty acid blood levels were reduced by the FDA initiative.

The 229 eligible participants were white, aged at least 20 years and had a morning fasting blood sample taken in 2000 and 2009. The four trans-fatty acids evaluated in the analysis included elaidic acid (C18:1n-9t), vaccenic acid (C18:1n-7t), linoelaidic acid (C18:2n-6t,9t) and palmitelaidic acid (C16:1n-7t).

All samples demonstrated detectable trans-fatty acids.

Vaccenic acid levels decreased 56% from 2000 to 2009, and elaidic, palmitelaidic and linoelaidic acid decreased in a similar fashion, according to the results.

Further analysis results indicated that from 2000 to 2009, the weighted geometric mean of the difference for the sum of all four acids was 54.1 mcmol/L (95% CI, 43.4-64.7 mcmol/L), a decrease of 58%.

“The 58% decline shows substantial progress that would help lower the risk for cardiovascular disease in adults,” Christopher Portier, PhD, director of the CDC’s National Center for Environmental Health, said in a press release. “Findings from the CDC study demonstrate the effectiveness of these efforts in reducing blood trans-fatty acids and highlight that further reductions in the levels of trans fats must remain an important public health goal.”

Samples from 2009 also contained lower LDL cholesterol levels than those from 2000, 119.2 mg/dL (3.09 mmol/L) vs. 128.2 mg/dL (3.32 mmol/L).

“This study is, to our knowledge, the first time information on [trans-fatty acids] in white adults in the US population has been examined,” the researchers wrote. “This may lead to a decrease in risk for CVD in this subpopulation. These findings provide preliminary data on white adults only and cannot be generalized to other racial/ethnic and age groups.”

Source: Endocrine Today.

 

 

Transsphenoidal surgery related to 72% cure rate in Cushing’s disease.


Transsphenoidal surgery was associated with long-term cure rates of more than 70% in patients with Cushing’s disease, according to researchers from the University of Birmingham in England.

“In early series, adrenal surgery and pituitary radiotherapy were the mainstays of treatment for Cushing’s disease,” the researchers wrote. “Subsequently, transsphenoidal surgery was established as the first-line treatment of choice. However, a survey of 30 US centers found that remission rates varied greatly, [ranging] from between 90% to 100% to as low as 10%.”

The researchers conducted a single-center study to define outcome in patients with Cushing’s disease treated with transsphenoidal surgery for 20 years. The retrospective cohort study included 80 patients who underwent the surgery from 1988 to 2009. In 72 patients, data on clinical features and outcome were collected from medical records. In the other eight patients, there were no records available, but mortality cases were obtained from the National Health Service (NHS) registry.

The cure rate was 72%, the persistent disease rate was 17% and the disease recurrence rate was 11%. The median time to recurrence after remission was 2.1 years. The mean follow-up for mortality was 10.9 years. Thirteen of the 80 patients had died: five in the cure group, two in the disease recurrence group, two with persistent disease and four of the patients with only NHS registry data.

The overall standardized mortality rate was 3.17 (95% CI, 1.7-5.43). In the cure group, the standardized mortality rate was 2.47 (95% CI, 0.8-5.77), and in the disease recurrence/persistent disease groups, the standardized mortality rate was 4.12 (95% CI, 1.12-10.54).

Source: Endocrine Today.

 

Access to less healthy foods remains constant in elementary schools.


Many elementary schools in America continue to offer students sweeter and saltier food from competitive venues, whereas healthier foods are becoming less widely available, according to results of a national mail-back survey.

Researchers analyzed data from 2,647 public and 1,205 private elementary schools during the 2006-2007 and 2009-2010 school years. They found that public school students in the South had greater access to salty and sweet foods, plus more competitive campus food venues (vending machines, school stores, a la carte lines and snack bars). However, these students also had greater access to healthier foods such as fruits and vegetables, the researchers reported.

In an interview with Endocrine Today, researcher Lindsey R. Turner, PhD, said increased obesity awareness has not been enough to bring about change.

“Our next step will be to look more at the associations between schools and district-level policies,” Turner said. “Federal policy changes will also be under consideration and the USDA will be considering recommendations dealing with competitive foods.”

Competitive food venues were available to about half of all public and private elementary school students as of the 2009-2010 school year, the researchers said.

“Sales of food and beverage in competitive venues — particularly a la carte lines — can generate significant revenues to cover shortfalls in food service operating costs,” the researchers wrote.

Turner said she believes that greater access to competitive food venues in the South is “certainly alarming.”

“But given that obesity rates are higher in the South, the mechanism is perhaps understandable there,” she said. “And this suggests there’s a good opportunity to make changes and make a difference.”

Turner said school is only one part of the solution, and clinicians, working with parents to instill the best choices at home, are the foundation of good habits.

“But making sure they’re in a healthy environment at school is important because they spend the most time there,” she said. “The healthy environment at home needs to carry over to school.”

Source: Endocrine Today.

 

High triglycerides increased risk for ischemic stroke in postmenopausal women.


Results from the Hormones and Biomarkers Predicting Stroke study showed that high triglyceride levels, independent of other lipids and risk factors, nearly doubled risk for stroke in older women.

In this prospective study of women participating in the Women’s Health Initiative, researchers examined data from 972 postmenopausal women aged 50 to 79 years who experienced ischemic stroke and matched 744 to control participants. Researchers assessed the relationships between fasting lipids, lipoproteins and risk for ischemic stroke.

Sylvia Wassertheil-Smoller, PhD, principal investigator of WHI and HaBPS and professor at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York, told Endocrine Today that the idea of the study was to predict which patients are at risk for stroke, so high-risk patients can take preventive measures.

“We can’t assume that the same lipids or biomarkers that are implicated in heart disease are also implicated in stroke,” she said.

Results

A bivariate analysis showed that women with ischemic stroke had higher levels of baseline triglycerides, intermediate-density lipoprotein, LDL particles and size, VLDL triglycerides, particles and size, and total cholesterol/HDL ratio. However, levels of HDL and HDL size were lower in women with ischemic stroke. Researchers also found that triglyceride levels were the only traditional lipid biomarkers associated with future ischemic stroke, with an unadjusted OR of 1.96 (95% CI, 1.46-2.1) for the highest vs. lowest quartile of biomarkers, according to study results.

In multivariable analysis, triglycerides (OR for highest vs. lowest quartile=1.56; 95% CI, 1.13-2.17), VLDL size (OR=1.59; 95% CI, 1.10-2.28) and intermediate-density lipoprotein particle number (OR=1.46; 95% CI, 1.04-2.04) were also associated with ischemic stroke. Women with triglyceride levels higher than the median and LDL below the median had a 32% (OR=1.32; 95% CI, 0.99-1.76) risk for developing ischemic stroke. This risk was 52% (OR=1.52; 95% CI, 1.14-2.03) in women with LDL equal to or higher than the median. Study results also showed that women with HDL lower than the median (OR=1.38; 95% CI, 1.02-1.87) and equal to or higher than the median (OR=1.34; 95% CI, 0.99-1.79) had an increased risk for stroke.

“The results were a little bit surprising,” Wassertheil-Smoller said. “Whether you have high LDL or low LDL, high triglycerides independently predict a higher stroke risk. LDL itself, which is very important in prediction of heart disease risk, was not important independently in prediction of stroke risk. It’s the triglycerides that are really important.”

Clinical implications

Overall, Wassertheil-Smoller said although LDL levels are important predictors of heart disease risk, physicians should focus on triglyceride levels as risk factors for stroke.

“Both doctors and patients should pay attention to high triglyceride levels as an independent stroke risk factor,” she said. “Physicians should also try to counsel women in the particular lifestyle changes that will lower triglycerides.

Source: Endocrine Today.

 

ACP recommends metformin as first medication to treat type 2 diabetes.


The American College of Physicians recommends that metformin be the first medication used to treat type 2 diabetes when diet, exercise and weight loss do not improve blood sugar, according to a new clinical practice guideline.

“We found that most diabetes medications reduced blood sugar levels to a similar degree,” Amir Qaseem, MD, PhD, FACP, MHA, director of clinical policy at the American College of Physicians (ACP), said in a press release. “However, metformin is more effective compared to other type 2 diabetes drugs in reducing blood sugar levels when used alone and in combination with other drugs. In addition, metformin reduces body weight and improves cholesterol profiles.”

ACP also recommends that clinicians add a second medication to metformin when hyperglycemia persists, despite lifestyle modifications and metformin monotherapy. However, they do not recommend a specific class of drugs for the second medication because of insufficient evidence.

The guideline is based on a systematic evidence review that included literature published from 1966 to April 2010. The researchers searched the Medline, Embase and Central databases for English-language publications. The outcomes evaluated for this review included all-cause mortality, cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, cerebrovascular morbidity, neuropathy, nephropathy and retinopathy.

“The evidence shows that most diabetes medications reduced HbA1c levels to a similar degree,” the guideline authors wrote. “Metformin was more effective than other medications as monotherapy with another agent for reducing HbA1c levels, body weight and plasma lipid levels.”

Source: Endocrine Today

FDA UPDATE.


Proton Pump Inhibitors (PPIs) – Drug Safety Communication: Clostridum Difficile-Associated Diarrhea (CDAD) Can be Associated With Stomach Acid Drugs

ISSUE: FDA notified the public that the use of stomach acid drugs known as proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) may be associated with an increased risk of Clostridium difficile–associated diarrhea (CDAD). A diagnosis of CDAD should be considered for patients taking PPIs who develop diarrhea that does not improve. The FDA is working with manufacturers to include information about the increased risk of CDAD with use of PPIs in the drug labels.

FDA is also reviewing the risk of CDAD in users of histamine H2 receptor blockers. H2 receptor blockers are used to treat conditions such as gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), stomach and small intestine ulcers, and heartburn.

BACKGROUND: Proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) are marketed under various brand and generic drug names as prescription and over-the-counter (OTC) products. They work by reducing the amount of acid in the stomach. Prescription PPIs are used to treat conditions such as gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), stomach and small intestine ulcers, and inflammation of the esophagus. Over-the-counter PPIs are used to treat frequent heartburn.

Clostridium difficile (C. difficile) is a bacterium that can cause diarrhea that does not improve. Symptoms include watery stool, abdominal pain, and fever, and patients may go on to develop more serious intestinal conditions. The disease can also be spread in hospitals.

RECOMMENDATION: Patients should immediately contact their healthcare professional and seek care if they take PPIs and develop diarrhea that does not improve. Information for Healthcare Professionals:

  • A diagnosis of CDAD should be considered for PPI users with diarrhea that does not improve.
  • Advise patients to seek immediate care from a healthcare professional if they experience watery stool that does not go away, abdominal pain, and fever while taking PPIs.
  • Patients should use the lowest dose and shortest duration of PPI therapy appropriate to the condition being treated.

Victrelis (boceprevir) and Ritonavir-Boosted Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Protease Inhibitor Drugs: Drug Safety Communication – Drug Interactions

ISSUE: FDA notified healthcare professionals and patients that drug interactions between the hepatitis C virus (HCV) protease inhibitor Victrelis (boceprevir) and certain ritonavir-boosted human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) protease inhibitors (atazanavir, lopinavir, darunavir) can potentially reduce the effectiveness of these medicines when they are used together.

A drug interaction study showed that taking boceprevir (Victrelis) with ritonavir (Norvir) in combination with atazanavir (Reyataz) or darunavir (Prezista), or with Kaletra (lopinavir/ritonavir) reduced the blood levels of the HIV medicines and boceprevir in the body (see Data Summary below). FDA will be updating the Victrelis drug label to include information about these drug interactions.

BACKGROUND: Victrelis is a hepatitis C virus (HCV) protease inhibitor used with the medicines peginterferon alfa and ribavirin to treat chronic (long-lasting) hepatitis C infection in adults. HIV protease inhibitors are a class of anti-viral drugs used to treat HIV infection. Ritonavir is an HIV protease inhibitor used to “boost” other HIV protease inhibitors, increasing their levels in the blood and making them more effective.

RECOMMENDATION: Patients should not stop taking any of their medicines without talking to their healthcare professional. Patients should contact their healthcare professional if they have any questions or concerns.

Healthcare professionals who have started patients infected with both chronic HCV and HIV on Victrelis and antiretroviral therapy containing a ritonavir-boosted protease inhibitor should closely monitor patients for HCV treatment response and for potential HCV and HIV virologic rebound.

Wholistic Herbs, Inc. “Koff and Kold” and “Kold Sore” Spray: Recall – Non-Sterile Products

ISSUE: Wholistic Herbs Inc. notified the public it is recalling all quantities of “Koff & Kold” spray with herbal extract and “Kold Sore” spray with liquid sea mineral. “Koff & Kold” spray with herbal extract is intended to be sprayed into the nose and throat for treatment of colds, flu, cough, stuffy nose, and sinus infection. “Kold Sore” spray with liquid sea mineral is intended to be sprayed into the eyes for the treatment of dry eye and pink eye. The product is also intended to be sprayed into the nose for sinus allergy by pollen, and onto the lips and genitals for the treatment of fever blisters, shingles and herpes simplex.

These products are not tested properly to assure their safety. Products intended for use in the eye that are non-sterile have the potential to cause eye infections, which may be sight threatening. Also, nasal solutions that are not sterile could lead to a respiratory infection.

The recall was the result of a routine FDA inspection which identified several labeling issues.

BACKGROUND: “Koff & Kold” and “Kold Sore” were distributed throughout the Unites States to retail stores located in Texas, California, Washington, Virginia, New Jersey, New York, Maryland, Illinois, Georgia, Nevada, Arizona, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Florida. The products were also distributed through acupuncture clinics and the firm’s website at www.naturalapothecary.com. These two spray products were distributed from March 2009 through February 2012.

 

 

Hand-held Dental X-Ray Units: FDA Safety Communication – Unreviewed Products May Not Be Safe or Effective

AUDIENCE: Dentistry

ISSUE: FDA notified healthcare professionals, including dentists, dental care professionals and veterinarians, about the illegal sale of hand-held dental X-ray units that have not been reviewed by the FDA. The FDA is aware of hand-held dental X-ray units being sold online by manufacturers outside the U.S. and directly shipped to customers in the U.S. These devices may not be safe or effective and could potentially expose the user and the patient to unnecessary and potentially harmful X-rays.

BACKGROUND: All hand-held dental X-ray units that have been certified by the manufacturer to meet the FDA’s radiation safety standards bear a certification label/tag, a warning label, and an identification (ID) label/tag on the unit’s housing. All labels/tags should be in the English language and permanently affixed or inscribed on each product so that they are legible and readily accessible when the X-ray unit is fully assembled for use.

RECOMMENDATION: Healthcare professionals should:

  • Verify that your device bears certification, warning and ID labels as described in the FDA Safety Communication.
  • Ask your vendor whether the device has been reviewed and cleared by the FDA.
  • Access the FDA Medical Device Approvals and Clearances searchable database to verify that the X-ray unit you are using has been reviewed by the FDA.

 

Source:FDA