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  #1   ^
Old Mon, Nov-16-09, 12:17
costello22's Avatar
costello22 costello22 is offline
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Default Popular cholesterol drug may hurt, not help

Quote:
New study raises fresh concerns about Zetia and its cousin, Vytorin

A new study raises fresh concerns about Zetia and its cousin, Vytorin — drugs that are still taken by millions of Americans to lower cholesterol, despite questions raised last year about how well they work.

In the study, Zetia failed to shrink buildups in artery walls while a rival drug, Niaspan, did so significantly. Zetia users also suffered more heart attacks and other problems although the numbers of these events are too small to draw firm conclusions.

"This study provides no evidence that would reassure us that this drug is beneficial, and it provides some evidence that it may be harmful," said Yale University cardiologist Dr. Harlan Krumholz, who had no role in the study.

The results, being presented Monday at an American Heart Association conference and published online by the New England Journal of Medicine, are likely to move more doctors away from prescribing Zetia and Vytorin.

Statins such as Lipitor and Crestor have long been used to lower LDL, or bad cholesterol, and are known to cut the risk of heart problems. Nevertheless, many statin users still suffer heart attacks, so doctors have been testing adding a second medicine to further lower risk.

One they are trying is Niaspan, a slow-release version of niacin, a type of B vitamin that raises HDL, or good cholesterol. Another is Zetia, which lowers bad cholesterol in a different way than statins do, by blocking its absorption in the gut.

Vytorin is a pill that combines Zetia with a statin. Both are sold by Merck & Co. of Whitehouse Station, N.J. Niaspan is made by North Chicago, Ill.-based Abbott Laboratories. All three of these drugs cost between $3 and $4 a day, though niacin has been sold as a cheap generic for decades.

The new study was sponsored by Abbott, and several study leaders have been paid speakers or consultants to the company or to rival drugmakers.

Researchers enrolled 363 people with heart disease or a high risk for it who had been taking statins for six years on average. Many were from Walter Reed Army Medical Center, where study leader Dr. Allen Taylor formerly worked.

Study halted early
Half were given Niaspan and the rest, Zetia. Researchers stopped the study in June, after 208 participants had been on the medicines for 14 months, because one group was faring much better than the other.

Ultrasound images of neck arteries showed that Niaspan shrank buildups by about 2 percent, while Zetia had no effect on this even though it lowered bad cholesterol as expected.

There were only two heart attacks, heart-related deaths or other heart-related problems in the 160 people given Niaspan, and nine among the 165 on Zetia.

"It should be better for the arteries and it wasn't. The drug wasn't operating as you otherwise would expect it to," raising concern that its effects are not fully understood, Taylor said.

Merck's research chief, Peter Kim, said the study and especially the number of heart attacks and other problems are too small to be conclusive. More than 25,000 people are in studies testing Zetia now, and independent monitors have found no problems that would lead them to stop the trials.

"We stand behind the safety of this drug," he said.

Drugs remain blockbusters
Last year, a large study found that the combo pill Vytorin was no more effective than Zocor alone, which is now available as a generic for a fraction of Vytorin's cost. In August, Merck and Schering-Plough Corp., its former partner in marketing Vytorin, agreed to pay $41.5 million to settle lawsuits claiming they delayed unfavorable study results on the drugs because they would hurt sales.

The drugs remain blockbusters: Vytorin had nearly $2 billion in sales in the United States in 2008; Zetia, more than $1.5 billion, according to IMS Health, a health care information and consulting company.

However, that's down substantially: Zetia prescriptions fell 22 percent, from nearly 16.5 million in 2007 to less than 13 million in 2008. Vytorin fell 24 percent in that time, from about 22 million in 2007 to 16.5 million in 2008. Vytorin sales were down another 36 percent in the first half of this year.

Niaspan has been gaining but lags far behind — 5.8 million prescriptions in 2008, up 11 percent from 2007.

Its main drawback is a prickly hot sensation called flushing that many people find intolerable. The extended-release version is supposed to minimize this, but a third of study participants still suffered it. The problem tends to go away with longer use and can be blunted by taking the medicine with aspirin, at bedtime, or with a low-fat snack, doctors say.


http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3394997...h-heart_health/
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  #2   ^
Old Mon, Nov-16-09, 12:19
Hutchinson's Avatar
Hutchinson Hutchinson is offline
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Last edited by Hutchinson : Mon, Nov-16-09 at 12:24.
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  #3   ^
Old Mon, Nov-16-09, 12:22
Nancy LC's Avatar
Nancy LC Nancy LC is offline
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Yeah, I think Dr. Davis is in for some big-time gloating!

I'm pleasantly surprised the drug company allowed the paper to be published, they usually like to bury anything negative.
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  #4   ^
Old Mon, Nov-16-09, 12:32
Hutchinson's Avatar
Hutchinson Hutchinson is offline
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Plan: Dr Dahlqvist's
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Nancy LC
Yeah, I think Dr. Davis is in for some big-time gloating!

I'm pleasantly surprised the drug company allowed the paper to be published, they usually like to bury anything negative.
Taylor was paid by the Niaspan makers Abbott so that's why the ezetimibe (Zetia) people, Merk, were trying to discredit the report.

I think Dr Davis is too nice to say "I could have told you so".
But I doubt there is anything in the report that will persuade Dr Davis to change his views and start prescribing Statins generally to all his patients.
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  #5   ^
Old Mon, Nov-16-09, 16:22
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Hutchinson Hutchinson is offline
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Plan: Dr Dahlqvist's
Stats: 205/152/160 Male 69
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