FDA: Viagra Safe Despite 101 Reports of Adverse Events June 26, 1998 5:21 PM By Otesa Middleton
WASHINGTON (Dow Jones)--The U.S. Food and Drug Administration continues to receive reports of serious health problems among a handful of men taking Pfizer's Viagra, but the agency still considers the drug safe and effective.
According to the FDA's most recent adverse-event data for Viagra, there were 101 such reports, some of them duplicates.
The FDA isn't alarmed by the reports because a direct link to Viagra, the blockbuster male impotence drug, hasn't been established, and Pfizer says the number is small considering the 2.5 million prescriptions written for the pill.
"We continue to believe the drug is safe and effective for the intended patient population," said Susan Cruzan, an FDA spokeswoman. "We will continue to monitor the reports for any kind of trend."
The report lists 29 deaths, 15 vision-related problems and several heart attacks and increased heart rates.
Pfizer (PFE) said it is required to report every possible case of an adverse event, and some instances are listed in the FDA's database more than once because the same incident may have been reported by different people.
"We get our reports from our sales reps, individual physicians and hospitals and we also process news reports," said Andy McCormick, a Pfizer spokesman.
For example, the database lists four cases of blindness in West Virginia. McCormick said the reports came from a salesperson who heard it from an osteopath, who heard that four men went blind while taking the drug. The company had to file the report within 15 days, according to FDA guidelines and couldn't find any additional information about the situation.
"Everything we have seen in terms of side effects is well within what we expected in the patient population," McCormick said.
Since Viagra hit the market in April, Pfizer said two million men have tried the drug. Scott-Levin, a health-care market research company, said $135.5 million of Viagra was sold by the end of May.
McCormick called the FDA's adverse-event report "reassuring" since 85% of prescriptions are written for men over age 50.
Dianne L. Kennedy, a pharmacist and epidemiologist at the FDA, said when any drug first hits the market the agency watches it closely.
"It is impossible to pick up all of the safety problems in clinical trials because of limitations," Kennedy said. "A clinical trial is very controlled, but when it gets to the general population a drug is used in people with other diseases and who are taking other medications."
Those other medications concern Dr. Charles L. Curry, chief of cardiology at Howard University's College of Medicine in Washington. He agrees that the reports aren't cause for alarm, but he wants to know more.
"We need more information on how Viagra works with other drugs," Curry said.
"It may be beneficial to study possible adverse drug interactions in a scientific way," Curry said.
Doctors Seek More Screening Guidance
Before Viagra's approval, Pfizer tested it for interactions with alcohol, common antacids, aspirin and blood-pressure medicines.
Curry, the Howard University College of Medicine chief cardiologist, said he wants to see a study of Viagra's use with a short-acting hypertension drug. Pfizer tested the drug's use with Norvasc, which Curry said takes longer to lower the blood pressure. Since Viagra acts quickly, it may have different interactions with a drug like Cardura, which sometimes causes a sudden drop in blood pressure.
"Some patients faint after the first dose of Cardura," Curry said. "That is the most worrisome combination I imagined."
The FDA report lists three cases of men also taking Cardura.
Pfizer's McCormick said the company chose to test Norvasc in clinical trials because it is so widely prescribed.
According to Scott-Levin, the health-care market research company, 17.8 million prescriptions were written for Norvasc last year compared to 6.9 million for Cardura.
Dr. Kevin T. McVary, impotency expert and associate professor of urology at Northwestern University Medical School in Chicago, said the reports of adverse events doesn't concern him.
"My suspicion is that Viagra isn't increasing the number of guys having heart attacks," said McVary, who has written several hundred Viagra prescriptions.
Dr. Lloyd W. Klein, professor of medicine and director of interventional cardiology at Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center in Chicago, said he would like to see more guidance from Pfizer about how to screen patients before prescribing them Viagra.
"The company needs to come out with a set of guidelines or rules," Klein said.
The Viagra labeling says: "A thorough medical history and physical examination should be undertaken to diagnose erectile dysfunction, determine potential underlying causes and identify appropriate treatment.
"There is a degree of cardiac risk associated with sexual activity: therefore, physicians may wish to consider the cardiovascular status of their patients prior to initiating any treatment for erectile dysfunction."
Klein said he wants Pfizer to tell him exactly what type of tests should be performed before he gives his patients Viagra.
"If someone has chest pain when they climb two flights of stairs, it's common sense you wouldn't prescribe Viagra until there is further testing," Klein said. "But what about males over 50 who have heart disease that hasn't declared itself?"
Klein said before he writes a Viagra prescription he has his patients undergo a stress test and makes sure they aren't taken nitrates, the only drug for which Viagra is contraindicated.
It is difficult to determine if a drug interaction has caused some of the adverse events or if underlying illness is to blame, Klein said.
"That is the $64,000 question," Klein said. "Nobody knows." -Otesa Middleton 202-862-6654 |