Celebrex Caused Increase Heart Problem Risk:
Pfizer
Dec.
17, 2004 – Celebrex has been found to cause increased risk of heart
problems, according to an announcement by Pfizer, maker of the
painkiller. Often used by senior citizens
with arthritis, Celebrex is in the same class as the Vioxx, the drug
yanked off the market in September because of similar concerns.
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Pfizer Claims Celebrex Safety in September:
Day Vioxx Recalled
Dec. 17, 2004 – On September 30, the day Merck &
Co. announced the recall of its COX-2 drug, Vioxx, Pfizer issued a news
release expressing confidence that Celebrex did not cause heart
problems, as found in the case of Vioxx.
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Pfizer also makes Bextra, another of the
pain-relief drugs classified as Cox-2 inhibitors, which the Food and
Drug Administration identified earlier as having the potential to cause
heart problems in those who had recently undergone heart bypass surgery.
The company was ordered to add the warning to the drug’s label.
Pfizer said today that
it found the increased risk of Celebrex in one of two long-term cancer
prevention trials. The other trial showed no increased risk. The company
says these trials were part of an effort to find a new application for
the drug.
The complete statement from Pfizer follows:
Dosing in Long-Term Cancer
Studies Suspended Due to Increased Cardiovascular Risk in One Study;
Preliminary Analysis of Second Long-Term Cancer Study Shows No Increased
Cardiovascular Risks
NEW YORK, Dec. 17 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Pfizer
Inc said it received new information last night about the cardiovascular
safety of its COX-2 inhibitor Celebrex (celecoxib) based on an analysis
of two long-term cancer trials.
As reported to Pfizer by the Data Safety and
Monitoring Board, one of the studies (the APC cancer trial) demonstrated
an increased cardiovascular risk over placebo, while the other trial
(the PreSAP cancer trial) revealed no greater cardiovascular risk than
placebo.
"These clinical trial results are new. The cardiovascular findings in
one of the studies (APC) are unexpected and not consistent with the
reported findings in the second study (PreSAP). Pfizer is taking
immediate steps to fully understand the results and rapidly communicate
new information to regulators, physicians and patients around the
world," said Hank McKinnell, Pfizer chairman and chief executive
officer.
Celebrex is approved for use in the United States
for the treatment of arthritis and pain, at recommended doses of 100mg
to 200mg daily for osteoarthritis and 200mg to 400mg a day for
rheumatoid arthritis. It is also approved for a rare condition called
familial adenomatous polyposis in doses up to 800mg per day. The APC
cancer trial was studied Celebrex at doses of 400mg to 800mg per day.
In the PreSAP cancer trial the dose was 400mg per day.
"In placing this new information in context, it is
important to understand that the APC trial results differ from both the
PreSAP cardiovascular results as well as the large body of data that we
and others have accumulated over time, in which an increased risk of
serious cardiovascular events in arthritis patients, even at
higher-than-recommended doses, had not been seen," said Dr. Joseph
Feczko, president of worldwide development for Pfizer.
"Celebrex is an important medicine that provides
necessary pain relief to many patient. Patients being treated with
Celebrex should discuss appropriate treatment options with their
healthcare professionals. Physicians should factor this new
information, as well as ulcer risks and gastrointestinal bleeding seen
with traditional NSAIDs, into their prescribing decision."
In the Adenoma Prevention with Celecoxib (APC)
trial, patients taking 400mg and 800mg of Celebrex daily had an
approximately 2.5 fold increase in their risk of experiencing a major
fatal or non-fatal cardiovascular event compared to those patients
taking placebo, according to the National Cancer Institute (NCI). Based
on these statistically significant findings, the sponsor of the trial,
the NCI, has suspended the dosing of Celebrex in the study.
In a separate long-term study, the Prevention of
Spontaneous Adenomatopus Polyps (PreSAP) trial, there has been no
increased risk for Celebrex patients taking 400mg daily compared with
those taking placebo. These findings are based on an identical analysis
used to assess cardiovascular risk in the APC trial and conducted by the
same independent safety review board. The information from this Pfizer
sponsored trial was also received by Pfizer last night and, as with the
APC information, was immediately shared by the company with the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration.
The two studies, which are following patients over
a five-year period, have enrolled a total of about 3,600 patients, some
of whom have participated for more than four years. Pfizer estimates
that about 2,400 patients evaluated in the cardiovascular analysis have
completed two years of treatment.
A third long-term study involving Celebrex in
patients at high-risk for Alzheimer's disease is also under way with
about 2,000 patients enrolled, about 750 of whom are on 400mg per day of
Celebrex. As with the cancer studies, this study is monitored by
independent safety experts who meet regularly to assess adverse events.
A review by this board as recent as December 10 did not result in any
recommendations to change the conduct of this study.
In September and October, the Data Safety and
Monitoring Boards of the APC and PreSAP cancer trials conducted a
preliminary review of all the then- available data and determined to
proceed with the studies. With the cooperation of Pfizer, the safety
review boards convened a panel of cardiovascular experts to conduct
additional reviews and analyses of the data from these two trials. Last
evening, Pfizer received preliminary information resulting from the
reviews. The company has not yet received the full analyses of these
studies.
As previously announced, Pfizer will continue to
work with FDA on the company's plans to sponsor a major clinical study
to further assess Celebrex in osteoarthritis patients at high-risk for
cardiovascular disease.
Additional Information on Celebrex
Patients who have aspirin-sensitive asthma, or
allergic reactions to aspirin or other arthritis medicines or certain
sulfa drugs called sulfonamides, or who are in their third trimester of
pregnancy should not take Celebrex. As with all NSAIDs, serious
gastrointestinal tract ulcerations can occur without warning symptoms.
Physicians and patients should remain alert to the signs and symptoms of
GI bleeding. Celebrex does not affect platelet function and therefore
should not be used for cardiovascular prophylaxis. As with all NSAIDs,
Celebrex should be used with caution in patients with fluid retention,
hypertension, or heart failure. In overall clinical studies the most
common side effects of Celebrex were dyspepsia, diarrhea and abdominal
pain, which were generally mild to moderate.
DISCLOSURE NOTICE: The information contained in
this release is as of December 17, 2004. The Company assumes no
obligation to update any forward- looking statements contained in this
release as a result of new information or future events or
developments.
This release contains forward-looking
information about the Company's products that involves substantial risks
and uncertainties. A description of these risks and uncertainties can be
found in the Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year
ended December 31, 2003 and in its reports on Forms 10-Q and 8-K.
End company
statement