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HEALTH NEWS

Study That Led to Vioxx Withdrawal Is Published

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Contributed by Carla Sharetto|  16 February, 2005  03:26 GMT

Almost twice as many patients who received Vioxx experienced a heart attack or stroke, compared to patients who took a placebo, in the largest prospective trial ever to examine the anti-inflammatory drug as a chemoprevention agent. The risk was first discovered and reported last September by the study's safety monitoring board and led to the shutdown of the colon cancer chemoprevention trial and subsequent withdrawal of the drug from the U.S. market.

The study's findings are published online in The New England Journal of Medicine as of February 15.

More Cardiovascular Evente with Vioxx

The trial, known as APPROVe (Adenomatous Polyp Prevention on Vioxx), was the longest test yet of Vioxx as a chemoprevention agent, and was designed to determine whether the drug could prevent the regrowth of precancerous colon polyps in people who had already had polyps removed.

The prospective chemoprevention study randomized 2,586 participants from 108 centers in 29 countries to receive either 25 mgs. of Vioxx daily or a placebo drug for three years, 2001-2004. The trial was stopped September 30, 2004 -- approximately two months before its planned completion.

Forty-six of the 1,287 patients randomized to take Vioxx daily had confirmed cardiovascular events -- mostly heart attacks or strokes -- over a three year period, according to Robert S. Bresalier, M.D., of the University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center and lead author of The New England Journal of Medicine study.

In the 1,299 patients given a placebo drug, there were 26 events. Each group, however, had the same number of deaths and not all were related to heart attacks or strokes.

Other Cardiac Problems Much More Prevalent with Vioxx

"The overall number of cardiovascular events is small, but, nevertheless, the difference between the groups is significant," says Dr. Bresalier, who is professor and chair of the Department of Gastrointestinal Medicine and Nutrition at M. D. Anderson and a member of the study's steering committee.

This study examined data on the 2,586 patients enrolled in the trial, all of whom had a history of adenomatous colon polyps. The most notable trend, according to Dr. Bresalier, was that patients did not begin to experience cardiovascular problems, such as heart attacks or strokes, until after 18 months of treatment. "In the first 18 months, the risks for the two treatments were similar," Dr. Bresalier says.

Other cardiac problems, such as hypertension-related events, pulmonary edema and congestive heart failure-related events were much more prevalent in the Vioxx-treated group compared to the placebo group and presented earlier. The data on these cases, however, is less firm, Dr. Bresalier notes, because, unlike heart attacks or strokes, these problems were not "adjudicated," or validated by a separate committee.

This was not a cardiovascular trial, reminds Dr. Bresalier, so while investigators reported all events, only the most serious were fully examined.

'Appropriate to Stop the Trial'

"Because patient benefit is the most important criteria for any study, it was appropriate to stop the trial," Dr. Bresalier says. "We don't know why Vioxx increased this risk, but we now have an opportunity to study whether subpopulations of patients are more susceptible than others."

"I think it's unfortunate that we've perhaps lost a class of drugs which potentially has very important roles in a variety of diseases -- arthritis, cancer prevention, cancer treatment, treatment of Alzheimer's disease, treatment of precancerous lesions, not only in the colon but in the esophagus and many other organs," says Dr. Bresalier.

"What we don't know is if the cardiovascular results seen in Vioxx represents a class effect of COX-2 inhibitors or if this is an individual effect to this drug. I don't think we can tell this from this one trial or from the trials that are out there at the moment. That's going to be the real question."

The investigators examined the use of cardio-protective aspirin among patients and found that it did not skew findings on the overall risk of Vioxx treatment.

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