buyhiman, Here's another article on Redux and phen/fen. It acknowledges that Redux is used alone and even breaks out the fact that 270 of the 291 patients who showed the abnormal EKG were on phen/fen for 6 months to a year (thus the IPIC press release was probably read by the author). However, it fails to note that 2/6 on Redux alone had abnormal EKGs:
Diet Drug Recall Tied to Heart Damage Risk
By RICHARD A. KNOX c.1997 The Boston Globe
New evidence on America's most popular diet pills raises the disquieting possibility that tens of thousands of patients may have suffered silent heart valve damage from taking them, federal officials and medical researchers said Monday.
The data, received this month by the US Food and Drug Administration, go considerably beyond earlier reports that dealt only with symptomatic heart disease and death among users of the diet drugs Redux and Pondimin. In response to the new findings, gathered from five different research sites, the drugs' manufacturers withdrew them from the market Monday.
It is not yet clear whether the asymptomatic heart damage is permanent and likely to worsen over time, or reversible once the drugs are stopped.
Redux, known generically as dexfenfluramine, is taken alone. But most of the patients with unsuspected heart valve damage were taking the popular but unapproved combination called ``fen/phen,'' which involves Pondimin, or fenfluramine, along with phentermine.
Phentermine remains on the market. But, faced with the new evidence last Friday, the drugs' manufacturers, American Home Products Corp. and its subsidiary Wyeth-Ayerst Laboratories, agreed to withdraw Redux and Pondimin.
The action was based on data documenting asymptomatic heart valve problems among one-third of patients taking one or the other drug for weight loss.
The 30 percent damage rate ``is a much higher than expected percentage of abnormal test results,'' than earlier reports last summer and last year suggested, the FDA said. Those had focused only on less common symptomatic side effects with the drugs - more severe valvular damage, pulmonary hypertension and death. The agency said Redux and Pondimin now ``present an unacceptable risk'' to patients.
The new evidence consists of mild to moderate valve damage - backward leakage of blood through the aortic and mitral valves. FDA officials and doctors familiar with the data say no one knows whether this damage will worsen or reverse itself once patients stop taking Pondimin or Redux.
Dr. Jack L. Crary, a North Dakota doctor who discovered 19 of 24 patients with more severe heart valve problems from diet drug use reported in July with Mayo Clinic researchers, said the new data indicate a higher rate of problems than he expected. ``From the beginning we wondered how many unsuspected cases were out there,'' Crary said. ``We tried not to be alarmist in our report, but this certainly is worrisome.''
``The moral of this story is that there was a lot of indiscriminate use of these drugs,'' added Dr. Frank Silvestry, a University of Pennsylvania heart specialist who submitted data to the FDA this month with colleague Dr. Thomas Wadden. ``I hope this won't turn to be an epidemic of important valve diseases in these patients.''
Other new evidence comes from individual doctors, clinics and academic medical centers in Milwaukee; Minneapolis; Naples, Fla.; and Danville, Ind.
The FDA is not calling for the withdrawal of phentermine, the other half of the ``fen/phen'' combination.
American Home Products Corp. agreed to withdraw the drugs after seeing the new FDA data on Friday. ``Even though this new information is not derived from a thorough clinical study and is difficult to evaluate, the company is taking the most prudent course,'' said Dr. Marc W. Deitch, a Wyeth-Ayerst vice president.
The French manufacturer of fenfluramine and dexfenfluramine also pulled the drugs from the market Monday.
The FDA urged patients to stop taking Redux or Pondimin immediately and consult their primary physicians. However, some doctors said the drug dose should be tapered over a week or so under a physician's guidance.
Of the 291 patients tested for heart valve damage by an ultrasound device called an echocardiogram, 92 had evidence of valve damage. Among the total group, 270 had been taking the unapproved ``fen/phen'' combination for six months to more than a year, an FDA official said Monday in an interview.
Dr. Janet Woodcock, director of the agency's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, said it is possible that several hundred thousand Americans may have suffered similar damage without knowing it. Without an echocardiogram, their doctors wouldn't know it either, since the mild to moderate damage seen among patients screened so far produces no symptoms or physical clues, such as a heart murmur.
The FDA tentatively estimates that 1 million Americans have used the fen/phen drug regimen, whose advocates say helps many people lose weight by blunting their craving for carbohydrates. The FDA has never approved the fen/phen regimen, but that has not stopped thousands of doctors and weight-loss clinics from pushing it as the latest in diet therapy.
``We don't know yet if we can extrapolate'' the 30 percent rate of heart valve problems ``to the general population who were exposed,'' Woodcock said. ``Maybe in a few weeks we'll have a better idea.''
Woodcock said the FDA plans to evaluate more echocardiograms from patients who have been taking fen/phen or Redux to verify if 30 percent have unsuspected programs.
The agency also wants some patients with silent valve damage to have serial echocardiograms to see if the problem worsens or improves over time. ``We have one report in which the valvular problem in a single patient improved after several months off therapy, but we don't know how to interpret that,'' Woodcock said.
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(The Boston Globe web site is at globe.com )
NYT-09-16-97 1006EDT< |