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In Avandia's case, some but not all studies have tied it to heart risks and deaths, and the bottom line may be different for various age groups. A new study this week found risks among elderly Medicare patients not seen in younger ones.
Also, the drug initially won approval in 1999 because it lowered blood sugar. That's a less clear benefit than reducing kidney problems or other diabetes complications.
Questionable approval criteria now are coming back to haunt the FDA as harmful effects emerge for drugs already in wide use, said Dr. Alastair Wood. He is a longtime Vanderbilt University professor now at a private equity firm who has led many FDA drug safety panels.
"Ten years since the drug was approved and we still don't know if it produces the benefits that patients really want. That's unacceptable," he lamented.
Dr. Robert Califf, a heart research leader at Duke University, agreed.
"We've got these legacy drugs that are out there without clear evidence one way or another," because they were approved on "soft" criteria, he said.
Given that, it's hard to see how the FDA can push Glaxo to withdraw Avandia now, he said. The studies on risk "are all over the place," said Califf, who has consulted for the company.
The FDA has called the special meeting in July to hear from experts on its endocrinology and drug safety panels, which include physicians from leading hospitals and research universities.
Ultimately, though, the decision whether to withdraw the drug rests with federal scientists. In 2007, the agency's internal panel of drug safety specialists voted 8-7 to keep Avandia on the market.
The agency's drug safety panel, which consists of high-ranking officials from the FDA and other agencies, was set up in 2005 to resolve safety disputes, after the agency was criticized for its handling of the Vioxx situation.
It will likely include FDA drug center leadership who oversaw the initial approval and subsequent labeling of Avandia.
___
Online:
Food and Drug Administration:
http://www.fda.gov/
Diabetes drug comparisons:
http://www.effectivehealthcare.ahrq.gov
/reports/final.cfm
Diabetes information:
http://www.diabetes.org/
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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