Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Vioxx - Underreporting of cardiovascular events in the rofecoxib Alzheimer disease studies

« BackAmerican Heart Journal
Article in Press

Underreporting of cardiovascular events in the rofecoxib Alzheimer disease studies

Received 24 December 2011; accepted 7 May 2012. published online 05 July 2012.
Corrected Proof

Background

In September 2004, rofecoxib (Vioxx) was removed from the market after it was found to produce a near doubling of cardiovascular thrombotic (CVT) events in a placebo-controlled study. Its manufacturer stated that this was the first clear evidence of such risk and criticized previous analyses of earlier CVT risk for focusing on investigator-reported events. We studied contemporaneously adjudicated CVT events to assess the information on cardiovascular risk available while the drug was in widespread use.

Methods

Using an intention-to-treat analysis of adjudicated CVT deaths, we analyzed detailed patient-level data collected during 3 randomized placebo-controlled trials of rofecoxib versus placebo that had been designed to define the drug's possible role in the prevention or treatment of Alzheimer disease. All trials had been completed by April 2003.

Results

In the 3 studies combined, the data indicated that rofecoxib more than tripled the risk of confirmed CVT death (risk ratio = 3.57 [1.48-9.72], P = .004). This finding reached the P < .05 level of significance by June 2001.

Conclusion

Intention-to-treat analysis of placebo-controlled studies of rofecoxib for Alzheimer disease demonstrated that the drug produced a significant increase in confirmed CVT deaths nearly 40 months before it was removed from the market. By contrast, published analyses of these trials were restricted to on-treatment analyses (ending 14 days after cessation of treatment) that did not reveal this risk. Intention-to-treat analyses of clinical trial data can reveal important information about potential drug risks and should be performed routinely and reported in a timely manner.

To access this article, please choose from the options below

PII: S0002-8703(12)00318-3

doi:10.1016/j.ahj.2012.05.002

© 2012 Mosby, Inc. All rights reserved.

« BackAmerican Heart Journal

Posted via email from Jack's posterous

No comments: