|
Deaths Prompt Recall of Anti-Cholesterol Drug
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
cholesterol-lowering drug taken by 700,000 Americans -- Bayer
Pharmaceutical's Baycol -- was pulled off the market Wednesday because of
muscle destruction linked to 31 U.S. deaths and at least nine more
fatalities abroad.
Baycol is one of an extraordinarily popular family of drugs called statins
that dramatically lower cholesterol and reduce patients' risk of heart
attacks. Yet every statin has been linked to very rare reports of the
muscle side effect called rhabdomyolysis.
The millions of Americans who take any of five other statins sold here
should not panic, Food and Drug Administration physicians said.
Baycol has been linked to significantly more fatal cases than its
competitors, said FDA's Dr. John Jenkins. So, he said, there are no plans
to strengthen existing warnings or take other action against the other
statins -- Mevacor, Pravachol, Zocor, Lescol and Lipitor.
Still, people suffering muscle pain who take any of those statins should
report it to their physicians, because they may need a lower dose or a
change in medication, Jenkins said.
Baycol is the 12th prescription drug taken off the U.S. market for
dangerous side effects since 1997.
Rhabdomyolysis is a life-threatening condition in which muscle cells are
destroyed and released into the bloodstream. It can cause severe muscle
pain, most frequently in the calves and lower back -- and occasionally is
so severe that patients develop potentially fatal kidney failure.
Concern about Baycol has simmered for months, as British regulators banned
a high dose of the drug and FDA officials debated similar steps, said Dr.
Sidney Wolfe of the consumer advocacy group Public Citizen.
Wednesday, working with FDA, Bayer announced it was stopping sales of
Baycol, also called cerivastatin, in every country except Japan.
Bayer executives refused to say how many rhabdomyolysis victims they have
counted worldwide. But in addition to the 31 American deaths, the FDA has
reports of at least nine Baycol-related fatalities abroad.
FDA's Jenkins said he didn't know how many Baycol users have survived a
rhabdomyolysis attack. But Wolfe said there have been hundreds of cases.
Baycol users should call their doctor about switching medications -- and
anyone who experiences muscle pain and is also taking another cholesterol
medicine called gemfibrozil should immediately stop the Baycol and report
the pain to a doctor, FDA advised.
Symptoms of rhabdomyolysis include muscle pain, weakness, tenderness,
fever, dark urine, nausea and vomiting.
Most at risk from Baycol are elderly patients, those who use higher doses,
and anyone who uses Baycol together with gemfibrozil. In 12 of the U.S.
deaths, patients were taking both of the drugs together.
Bayer executives said they are continuing to sell Baycol in Japan because
lower doses are sold there, and gemfibrozil is not on the Japanese market.
Public Citizen's Wolfe said his group may write Japanese regulators to urge
that Baycol's sale be stopped there, too.
Associated Press (c) iSyndicate
- - - - -
|