Glitazonas en el JAMA


El diario El Mundo recoge la nota de prensa de un estudio de casos y controles anidado, publicado en el JAMA, que asocia el uso de las tiazolidinedionas, con un aumento del riesgo de insuficiencia cardiaca, infarto y muerte en ancianos.
Según explican los autores este es un grupo poco representado en los ensayos clínicos a pesar de tener la mayor prevalencia de la enfermedad
Lorraine L. Lipscombe y cols, realizaron un seguimiento, durante una media de 3,8 años, a 12.491 pacientes diabéticos mayores de 65 años, de la región de Ontario que estuvieran recibiendo tratamiento oral.

Los datos fueron tomados de los registros de hospitales y centros sanitarios de la zona. Los investigadores comprobaron que, durante el tiempo del estudio, un 7,9% de los participantes necesitó asistencia médica por una insuficiencia cardiaca, otro 7,9% lo hizo a causa de un infarto y un 19% falleció.

El tratamiento actual con monoterapia de TZD se asocio en forma significativa a un aumento del riesgo de ICC (78 casos; adjusted rate ratio [RR], 1,60; IC 95%, 1,21-2,10; P < 0,001), IAM (65 casos; RR, 1,40; IC 95%, 1,05-1,86; P = =,02), y muerte (102 casos; RR, 1,29; IC 95%, 1,02-1,62; P = 0,03) comparado con otros agentes antidiabeticos orales (3478 casos de ICC, 3695 casos de IAM, y 5529 muertes). El aumento del riesgo parece estar limitado a la rosiglitazona.

Aunque señalan que debido al pequeño numero de personas que toman pioglitazona como monoterapia, el estudio podría no haber detectado efectos adversos asociados a esta.
“Nuestro trabajo proporciona evidencias más convincentes de que la rosiglitazona se asocia con un aumento en el riesgo de episodios cardiacos y muertes entre las personas mayores con diabetes”, apuntan.
Los autores de esta última investigación reconocen que tampoco su trabajo pondrá punto y final a la polémica ya que tiene algunas limitaciones, como el hecho de que la población estudiada representa a un grupo de pacientes con una diabetes muy avanzada, lo que podría interferir en los resultados finales del trabajo.
Los autores concluyen que son necesarios estudios más a fondo para cuantificar los riesgos y beneficios asociados a esta terapia y explorar si los riesgos asociados a estos fármacos son específicos de la rosiglitazona

La nota del periodico

MÁS RIESGO CARDIOVASCULAR EN ANCIANOS Nuevo varapalo para los fármacos de la familia de Avandia – CRISTINA G. LUCIO El Mundo Salud – España 13/12/2007

Esta disponible en
http://elmundosalud.elmundo.es/elmundosalud/2007/12/12/corazon/1197448558.html

y

El resumen del trabajo

Lorraine L. Lipscombe; Tara Gomes; Linda E. Levesque; Janet E. Hux; David N. Juurlink; David A. Alter. Thiazolidinediones and Cardiovascular Outcomes in Older Patients With Diabetes. JAMA 2007;298 2634-2643
esta disponible en

http://jama.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/abstract/298/22/2634?etoc

Martín Cañas

macanas@netverk.com.ar

Butlletí Groc: Glitazonas en la diabetes de tipo 2: ¿una relación beneficio-riesgo desfavorable?


Butlletí Groc vol. 20 n. 4
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Glitazonas en la diabetes de tipo 2: ¿una relación beneficio-riesgo desfavorable?
http://www.icf.uab.es/informacion/boletines/bg/bg204.07e.pdf

© FUNDACIO INSTITUT CATALA DE FARMACOLOGIA
bgroc@icf.uab.es
http://www.icf.uab.es/bgc
http://www.icf.uab.es/bge

Journal Watch en Portugues


Journal Watch: Diabetes


In a New Meta-Analysis, Thiazolidinediones Increase CHF but Not Cardiac Death

General Medicine | Summary and Comment | Subscription Required

The results aren’t inconsistent with previous meta-analyses.

By Bruce Soloway, MD

October 11, 2007

Covering: Lago RM et al. Lancet 2007 Sep 29; 370:1129

Cleland JGF and Atkin SL. Lancet 2007 Sep 29; 370:1103

Montori VM et al. Lancet 2007 Sep 29; 370:1104

Lancet 2007 Sep 29; 370:1101

Thiazolidinediones and Increased MI Risk: A Class Effect?

Cardiology | Summary and Comment | Subscription Required

New meta-analyses support an increased risk for MI with rosiglitazone, but not with pioglitazone.

By JoAnne M. Foody, MD

October 10, 2007

Covering: Lincoff AM et al. JAMA 2007 Sep 12; 298:1180

Singh S et al. JAMA 2007 Sep 12; 298:1189

Routine Use of Perindopril and Indapamide in Type 2 Diabetes

Cardiology | Summary and Comment | Subscription Required

A simple and practical strategy emerges as an ADVANCE in the prevention of vascular events due to hypertension.

By Beat J. Meyer, MD

October 10, 2007

Covering: Patel A et al. for the ADVANCE Collaborative Group. Lancet 2007 Sep 8; 370:829

Optimal Hemoglobin A1c Targets: Guidance from the ACP

General Medicine | Summary and Comment | Subscription Required

The core recommendation is not new, but the ACP commendably focuses on individualizing goals for glycemic control.

By Richard Saitz, MD, MPH, FACP, FASAM

October 9, 2007

Covering: Qaseem A et al. Ann Intern Med 2007 Sep 18; 147:417

Which Antidiabetic Drugs Are Safest for People with Diabetes and Heart Failure?

General Medicine | Summary and Comment | Subscription Required

In this systematic review, metformin was associated with the best outcomes.

By Keith I. Marton, MD

October 9, 2007

Covering: Eurich DT et al. BMJ 2007 Sep 8; 335:497

Aerobic Exercise and Resistance Training Benefit Glycemic Control

General Medicine | Summary and Comment | Free

Physical activity — especially aerobic exercise and resistance training combined — can significantly lower hemoglobin A1c levels in patients with type 2 diabetes.

By Richard Saitz, MD, MPH, FACP, FASAM

October 4, 2007

Covering: Sigal RJ et al. Ann Intern Med 2007 Sep 18; 147:357

Screening and Follow-Up for Gestational Diabetes

Women’s Health | Practice Watch | Free

High-risk individuals require both initial screening and repeated testing during and after pregnancy.

By Ann J. Davis, MD

October 4, 2007

Covering: Metzger BE et al. Diabetes Care 2007 Jul 30:251

The Questions Continue About Thiazolidinediones’ Safety

Cardiology | Summary and Comment | Free

A new meta-analysis shows an elevated risk for congestive HF but no increase in cardiovascular death rate with either rosiglitazone or pioglitazone

By Beat J. Meyer, MD

September 28, 2007

Covering: Lago RM et al. Lancet 2007 Sep 29; 370:1129

Cleland JGF and Atkin SL. Lancet 2007 Sep 29; 370:1103

Montori VM et al. Lancet 2007 Sep 29; 370:1104

Lancet 2007 Sep 29; 370:1101

Fitness, Obesity, and Insulin Resistance

Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine | Summary and Comment | Subscription Required

Exercise decreased insulin resistance despite no changes in fat or lean body mass.

By Alain Joffe, MD, MPH, FAAP

September 26, 2007

Covering: Bell LM et al. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2007 Aug 14;

Free Full-Text Article

Summary and Comment

In a New Meta-Analysis, Thiazolidinediones Increase CHF but Not Cardiac Death

The results aren’t inconsistent with previous meta-analyses.

The thiazolidinediones (TZDs) rosiglitazone and pioglitazone are known to increase fluid retention and congestive heart failure. Concern about the cardiovascular safety of these drugs has risen since May 2007, when results of a meta-analysis indicated that patients randomized to rosiglitazone had significantly increased risk for myocardial infarction (Journal Watch May 24 2007).

In a new meta-analysis, researchers reviewed seven randomized trials involving 20,191 patients with type 2 diabetes or prediabetes who were randomized to a TZD or a comparator drug or placebo for 12 to 48 months and were studied for outcomes including CHF and cardiovascular death. Patients who received a TZD had significantly increased risk for CHF compared with controls (2.3% vs. 1.4%), but their risk for cardiovascular death was not significantly increased.

Comment: The authors suggest that increased CHF events with the thiazolidinediones likely resulted from fluid retention superimposed on diastolic dysfunction and that such CHF events may have different prognostic implications than those caused by primary deterioration of myocardial function. The absence of increased cardiovascular mortality in this analysis is consistent with the results of both the aforementioned meta-analysis (in which increased mortality failed to reach statistical significance) and subsequent meta-analyses showing no increased mortality with either rosiglitazone or pioglitazone (Journal Watch Sep 11 2007). Noting the complexity of cardiovascular pathophysiology and the limitations of meta-analyses, editorialists decry the paucity of trials powered to measure “patient-centered” outcomes such as cardiovascular events, the overreliance on surrogate endpoints such as HbA1c, and the premature approval of drugs with multiple poorly understood long-term effects. Clinically, says one editorialist, “the jury is still out for the thiazolidinediones.”

Bruce Soloway, MD

Published in Journal Watch General Medicine October 11, 2007

Citation(s):

Lago RM et al. Congestive heart failure and cardiovascular death in patients with prediabetes and type 2 diabetes given thiazolidinediones: A meta-analysis of randomised clinical trials. Lancet 2007 Sep 29; 370:1129.

Medline abstract (Free)

Cleland JGF and Atkin SL. Thiazolidinediones, deadly sins, surrogates, and elephants. Lancet 2007 Sep 29; 370:1103.

Medline abstract (Free)

Montori VM et al. Patient-important outcomes in diabetes — time for consensus. Lancet 2007 Sep 29; 370:1104.

Medline abstract (Free)

Ensuring drug safety: Lessons from the thiazolidinediones. Lancet 2007 Sep 29; 370:1101.

Medline abstract (Free)