Roche's Posicor May Pose Danger After Withdrawal
Bloomberg News June 18, 1998, 6:22 p.m. ET
Roche's Posicor May Pose Danger After Withdrawal (Update1)
Chicago, June 18 (Bloomberg) -- Roche Holding AG's blood pressure treatment Posicor, taken off the market earlier this month because of worries over drug interactions, may linger in patients' systems and cause problems when patients are put on new medications, according to a report in a leading medical journal.
The Journal of the American Medical Association put out a statement in advance of its publication of four case studies in which patients stopped taking Posicor and went into shock after they quickly began new medications in Posicor's drug class, known as calcium channel blockers. One of the patients died.
''The journal editors deemed it important to get this information out as quickly as possible,'' said Jeff Molter, director of science news at the American Medical Association. ''There are 200,000 people out there coming off this medication.''
Researchers who submitted the case reports, which will be published in the July 8 issue of JAMA, said former Posicor patients should have a ''wash-out'' period in which they take no blood pressure drugs before moving onto calcium channel blockers or another class of drugs known as beta blockers. Pfizer Inc., Zeneca Plc, and Bayer AG are the leading makers of calcium channel blockers, while companies including Novartis AG and SmithKline Beecham Plc sell beta blockers.
Patients who took Posicor should immediately consult with their doctors on the issue, and doctors should monitor their patients carefully. Roche said patients and doctors can call 1- 800-205-4611 with questions.
Other Conditions
The four cases identified by researchers at the Oregon Poison Center at Oregon Health Sciences University occurred before the drug was taken off the market when doctors decided that Posicor wasn't working well enough to control blood pressure in their patients and switched their medications.
''These patients had other medical conditions and other medications,'' which may have added to the problem of dangerously low blood pressure, researchers said. Still, the timing of the problem within one day of taking Posicor, also known as mibefradil, ''suggests that this combination should be avoided,'' they said.
Two of the cases occurred in Oregon and researchers heard of two others as they compiled their case reports, said B. Zane Horowitz, medical director of the Oregon Poison Center. Horowitz said he didn't know of any other cases. Still, ''As patients and physicians read this, they may think back to a case where something similar had happened,'' he said.
For patients and doctors, ''the main thing is they need to safely work out a plan to stop mibefradil and to control their blood pressure,'' Horowitz said. If patients were only taking Posicor, they should be able to immediately go onto a drug in a class that works differently -- including drugs such as ACE inhibitors -- as long as they are still monitored carefully, he said. ACE inhibitors are sold by Zeneca, Merck & Co., Bristol- Myers Squibb Co. and others.
After learning of the cases, Roche sent a letter to doctors on June 12 advising them that a washout period should be used before switching patients to certain other blood pressure drugs. The length of the washout depends on which drugs the doctor plans to prescribe.
''After the withdrawal took place, we got response from physicians that a small number of patients experienced drug interactions when they substituted'' Posicor for another drug, said Martin Hirsch, a U.S.-based Roche spokesman. ''It was at that point that we learned everything we could.''
In addition to the ''Dear Doctor'' letter, the company launched an information campaign for doctors, instructed its sales force to contact doctors directly and sent a letter to companies that manufacture products that might be involved in drug interactions, Hirsch said.
''We have tried to cover every base with every group,'' he said. While declining to comment on whether additional reports have been received by the company, he said, ''We are monitoring the situation very very closely.''
Switzerland-based Roche, the world's sixth biggest drugmaker, announced on June 8 that it would pull Posicor from the $24 billion global market for hypertension treatments.
The drug, first sold last year, was expected to have up to 800 million Swiss francs ($544 million) in annual sales within five years, analysts said, which would have made it one of Roche's best-selling drugs behind antibiotic Rocephin. The decision came after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration recommended the drug be removed from sale.
The removal followed the addition of a warning to Posicor's label late last year that said the drug might cause dangerously low heart rates in some patients and might increase the risk of muscle injury when taken with certain cholesterol lowering drugs.
JAMA's release of this information is reminiscent of last year's move by the New England Journal of Medicine to warn patients about heart valve problems seen in people taking a diet drug combination known as fen-phen before the official publication of research. The ''fen'' part of the combination, known as fenfluramine, was later pulled from the market by its manufacturer, American Home Products Corp.
''Journals are trying to be quicker in the release of information,'' Molter said.
--Kristin Jensen in the Washington newsroom (202) 624-1843 with |