2nd UPDATE: FDA Reviews Osteoporosis Drugs For Fracture Risk
11 March 2010 - 11:41AM
Dow Jones News
The Food and Drug Administration said Wednesday it's conducting
a safety review of certain bone-building drugs like Fosamax and
Boniva to see if they increase the risk of femur fractures.
The review involves a class of drugs known as bisphosphonates,
which are commonly prescribed to treat osteoporosis and are
designed to build bone mass. Drugs in the class include Actonel,
marketed by Sanofi Aventis SA (SNY) and Procter & Gamble Co.
(PG), Boniva, marketed by Roche Holding AG (RHHBY) and
GlaxoSmithKline PLC (GSK), and Merck & Co.'s (MRK) Fosamax.
The agency said it was looking at reports about whether there's
an increased risk of atypical subtrochanteric femur
fractures--fractures in the bone just below the hip joint--in some
patients who have been on the drugs for several years.
However, the FDA said, "the data that FDA has reviewed have not
shown a clear connection between bisphosphonate use and a risk of
atypical subtrochanteric femur fractures.
Two studies presented Wednesday at the American Academy of
Orthopaedic Surgeons' annual meeting suggested the drugs might
adversely affect bone quality and increase risk of atypical
fractures of the femur, or the main bone in the thigh when used for
four or more years.
The FDA said it had requested information from drug
manufacturers in 2008 after seeing case reports about femur
fractures occurring in women with osteoporosis using
bisphosphonates.
"FDA's review of these data did not show an increase in this
risk in women using these medications," the agency said in a
statement posted to its Web site Wednesday. The agency also cited a
2008 study that found similar femur fracture rates among women
taking bisphosphonates compared to women not taking the drugs. The
study found that the femur fractures had many features in common
with osteoporotic hip fractures.
However, the agency said it would work closely with outside
experts, including members of the recently convened American
Society of Bone and Mineral Research's Subtrochanteric Femoral
Fracture Task Force, to gather additional information.
Merck, which makes Fosamax, said it has not seen any increased
fracture risk with the drug at any skeletal site in clinical
studies. Fosamax, which is also available as a generic drug, was
approved in 1995 and was the first bisphosphonate approved in the
U.S. The company said it has several ongoing studies to investigate
fracture risks. The FDA said people currently taking the
medications should not stop taking them but said they should talk
to their doctors if they develop new hip or thigh pain. The agency
asked doctors to report any side effects seen with bisphosphonates
to the agency.
Bisphosphonates are designed to work by slowing or stopping bone
loss by partially blocking the body's natural process that's
involved in removing and rebuilding bone tissue. The drugs have
been shown to increase bone mass and stop or slow the progression
of osteoporosis.
But researchers said Wednesday that while the drugs are
effective at increasing the quantity of bone, it's possible they
might cause brittle bones over the long-term that are more
susceptible to fractures.
One study by researchers at Columbia University looked at the
bone structure of 111 postmenopausal women with osteoporosis, 61 of
whom had been taking bisphosphonates for a minimum of four years
and compared it to 50 people taking calcium and vitamin D
supplements.
"In the early treatment period, patients using bisphosphonates
experienced improvements in all parameters, including decreased
buckling ratio and increased cross-sectional area," Melvin
Rosenwasser, an orthopaedic surgeon for Columbia University Medical
Center, said in a statement. "However, after four years of use,
these trends reversed revealing an association between prolonged
therapy and declining cortical bone structural integrity."
Rosenwasser said the drugs are still very effective at
preventing bone loss and the findings from the study shouldn't
change treatment practices. He said additional studies are
needed.
Another, separate study, by researchers at the Hospital for
Special Surgery in New York, looked at bone samples taken from 21
post-menopausal women who were treated for femoral fractures. Of
these, 12 patients had a history of bisphosphonate treatment for an
average of 8.5 years, while nine women hadn't been treated with the
drugs.
The study found that patients who had been treated with
bisphosphonates had a reduction in bone tissue heterogeneity
compared with women who had not received the drugs, which
researchers said suggests there might be differences in some
bone-quality parameters.
-By Jennifer Corbett Dooren, Dow Jones Newswires; 202-862-9294;
jennifer.corbett@dowjones.com
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