HHAL MEDICAL NEWS JUNE 2010
Adverse Events Associated
with Testosterone Administration
ABSTRACT
Background Testosterone supplementation
has been shown to increase muscle mass and strength in healthy
older men. The safety and efficacy of testosterone treatment in
older men who have limitations in mobility have not been studied.
Methods Community-dwelling men, 65 years of age or older, with limitations in mobility and a total serum testosterone level of
100 to 350 ng per deciliter (3.5 to 12.1 nmol per liter) or a free
serum testosterone level of less than 50 pg per milliliter (173
pmol per liter) were randomly assigned to receive placebo gel or
testosterone gel, to be applied daily for 6 months. Adverse events
were categorized with the use of the Medical Dictionary for Regulatory
Activities classification. The data and safety monitoring board
recommended that the trial be discontinued early because there
was a significantly higher rate of adverse cardiovascular events
in the testosterone group than in the placebo group.
Results A total of 209 men (mean age, 74 years) were enrolled at the time the trial was terminated. At baseline, there was a
high prevalence of hypertension, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, and
obesity among the participants. During the course of the study,
the testosterone group had higher rates of cardiac, respiratory, and
dermatologic events than did the placebo group. A total of 23 subjects
in the testosterone group, as compared with 5 in the placebo group, had cardiovascular-related adverse events. The
relative risk of a cardiovascular-related adverse event remained
constant throughout the 6-month treatment period. As compared with
the placebo group, the testosterone group had significantly greater
improvements in leg-press and chest-press strength and in stair
climbing while carrying a load.
Conclusions In this population of older men with limitations in
mobility and a high prevalence of chronic disease, the application of
a testosterone gel was associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular
adverse events. The small size of the trial and
the unique population prevent broader inferences from being made
about the safety of testosterone therapy.
http://consumer.healthday.com/Article.asp?AID=640242
Intensive Glucose Control Reduces Some Microvascular Complications — At the Cost of Increased Mortality
Intensive glucose control in high-risk diabetes offers mixed results, according to two
new analyses from the ACCORD trial.
In ACCORD, patients with type 2 diabetes and elevated cardiovascular
risk were randomized to intensive glucose control or standard therapy. About half were also assigned to intensive or standard blood pressure control, and the other half to combination
or standard lipid therapy. Intensive glucose control was stopped early, in 2008, because of increased mortality.
Now,
writing in the Lancet, ACCORD
researchers report that the glucose-control groups did not differ in composite outcomes measuring kidney function, diabetic
eye complications, andperipheral neuropathy. However, several components of the composite
outcomes (e.g., microalbuminuria, cataract extraction) were less common with intensive glucose control.
And
in the New England Journal of Medicine, ACCORD researchers observe that both intensive glucose control and combination
lipid therapy reduced progression of retinopathy, while intensive BP
control did not.
Despite the microvascular benefits, the Lancet authors conclude, the increased mortality makes aggressive hemoglobin targets in
high-risk diabetes seem "imprudent."
http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(10)60576-4/abstract
Albuminuria and Glomerular Filtration Rates as Independent Predictors of Mortality
Data will help refine the stages
of chronic kidney disease.
Albuminuria and estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) are used to define stages of chronic kidney disease, but at what levels
such stage transitions occur continues to be debated. In this analysis, researchers combined patient-level data from 21 large
population-based studies (1.2 million patients) that provided data on baseline albuminuria or eGFR and on outcomes, including
all-cause or cardiovascular mortality. In the three largest studies, dipstick testing was used to measure albuminuria, but
urine albumin-to-creatinine ratios (ACRs) were available for more than 100,000 patients.
Mortality
risk was fairly constant for eGFR between 75 and 105 mL/minute/1.73 m2. In contrast (with eGFR of 95 mL/minute/1.73
m2 as a baseline), hazard ratios for all-cause mortality were 1.18,
1.57, and 3.14 for eGFRs of 60, 45, and 15 mL/minute/1.73 m2, respectively. Compared with mortality at a baseline
ACR of 5 mg/g, HRs for all-cause mortality were 1.20, 1.63, and 2.22 for ACRs of 10, 30, and 300 mg/g, respectively. Dipstick
measurement of albumin yielded results that were similar to those obtained by ACR; cardiovascular mortality risk mirrored
that for all-cause mortality. The association of eGFR with all-cause mortality was similar across all levels of ACR and vice
versa, suggesting multiplicative independent risk factors; results were largely independent of other cardiovascular risk factors.
Comment: These data will be helpful in refining the stages
of chronic kidney disease, perhaps including greater importance for higher levels of albuminuria. Inclusion of renal
parameters also could sharpen the precision of cardiovascular risk calculators.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20483451?dopt=Abstract
Type 2 diabetes can be prevented
Low-dose
combination therapy with rosiglitazone and metformin was highly effective in prevention of Type 2 diabetes in patients with
impaired glucose tolerance, with little effect on the
clinically relevant adverse events of these two drugs. (Free registration required.) The Lancet
http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(10)60746-5/abstract
More Evidence Against Rosiglitazone
Rosiglitazone
continues to compare unfavorably with other diabetes therapies in two studies released online Monday.
Updating
their 2007 meta-analysis, researchers again found that rosiglitazone significantly increased the risk for myocardial infarction, while there was no increase in risk for cardiovascular or all-cause mortality.
The update appears in the Archives of Internal
Medicine.
Writing in JAMA,
researchers present their analysis of cardiovascular and mortality risks in a retrospective cohort of over 200,000 Medicare
patients. The subjects had started treatment with either rosiglitazone or pioglitazone and were followed for up to 3 years
(median, 105 days). Compared with patients taking pioglitazone, those on rosiglitazone had
higher risks for stroke,heart failure, and death. Risk for MI did not differ between
the groups. The authors calculate a number needed to harm of 60 patients treated for 1 year.
JAMA's editorialist suggests as one option the "removal
of rosiglitazone from the US market." (In July, FDA advisors will meet to discuss whether to keep the drug on the market.)
http://archinte.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/full/2010.207
Archives' Studies Call into Question Statins for Primary Prevention
Two papers in the Archives of Internal
Medicine cast doubt on the benefits of statins for primary prevention.
In
a meta-analysis, researchers combined data from 11 placebo-controlled trials of statin use in some 65,000 high-risk patients
without cardiovascular disease at
baseline. During nearly 4 years of treatment, LDL
levels were lower in statin than in placebo users (mean, 94 vs. 134
mg/dL) — but there was no difference in all-cause mortality. Editorialists say the analysis "makes it clear that
in the short-term, for true primary prevention, the benefit, if any, is very small."
In
another paper, investigators took a closer look at the JUPITER trial, in which rosuvastatin reportedly lowered cardiovascular
risk by 50% among patients without heart disease or hypercholesterolemia but
with high C-reactive protein. The investigators
say the trial was "flawed" — it was stopped too early, data on cardiovascular mortality were lacking, and
more than half the researchers had financial ties to industry. Accordingly, they conclude: "The results of the trial do not support the use of statin treatment for primary prevention."
http://archinte.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/full/170/12/1024
Early Dialysis Not Necessarily Better in Chronic Kidney Disease
In
patients with chronic kidney disease, outcomes are similar regardless of the planned timing of dialysis, according to a New England Journal of Medicine study.
Researchers in Australia and New
Zealand randomized some 830 adults with progressive, end-stage renal disease to early initiation of dialysis
(when estimated glomerular filtration ratereached
10-14 ml/minute) or late initiation (eGFR, 5-7 ml/minute). Ultimately, dialysis began an average of 5.5 months earlier in
the early-start group. About three-fourths of "late-start" patients actually began dialysis when eGFR was above
7 ml/minute, owing to symptoms such as uremia.
During a median 3.5 years' follow-up,
mortality was similar in the two groups (about 35%). In addition, there were no differences in cardiovascular outcomes, infections,
or dialysis complications.
The authors say their findings show that "with careful clinical management, dialysis may be delayed until either the GFR drops below 7.0 ml per minute or more
traditional clinical indicators for the initiation of dialysis are present."
http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/full/NEJMoa1000552
Digoxin Associated with Higher Mortality in Patients on Dialysis
Digoxin use in patients on hemodialysis is associated with increased mortality,
according to aretrospective cohort study in
the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology.
Among some 120,000
patients starting hemodialysis in a 6-year period, digoxin use was associated with a 28% increased risk for death. Higher
serum level of digoxin, but not the dosage prescribed, was also associated with increased mortality. For patients with high
serum digoxin levels, lower potassium levels at the outset of dialysis therapy (under 4.3 vs. over 4.6 mEq/L) were associated
with the greatest risk.
The increased risks remained significant after adjustment
for disease severity, propensity for treatment, and other characteristics.
The authors recommend
"strict [potassium] and digoxin level management" when patients with end-stage
renal disease remain on digoxin.
http://jasn.asnjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/ASN.2009101047v1
Rice Intake and Risk for Developing Type 2 Diabetes
Substituting brown rice for white rice might lower relative risk for diabetes.
Brown rice retains the outer bran and germ that are stripped off to make white
rice; the glycemic index (a measure of blood glucose
response) of brown rice is lower than that of white rice. Rice intake in the U.S. is almost 21 pounds per person annually, and 70% of that amount
is white rice. Harvard investigators pooled data from three U.S. prospective cohort studies to assess the difference in risk for developing type
2 diabetes with brown or white rice intake.
Nearly 200,000 adults without known diabetes,
cardiovascular disease, or cancer were assessed at baseline and every 2 to 4 years thereafter (follow-up, 14–22 years).
About 10,500 incident cases of diabetes were identified. In adjusted analyses, relative risk for developing diabetes was 17%
greater in the group with the highest intake of white rice ( 5 servings
weekly) than in the lowest-intake group (<1 serving monthly); conversely, relative risk was 11% lower in the group with the highest intake of brown rice than in the lowest-intake group.
Comment: Diabetes associated with white rice intake has been explored in Asian populations and now has been evaluated for the
first time in Western populations.Whole grains in
the diet protect against developing diabetes, and brown rice is no exception. We should encourage patients to substitute brown
rice for white rice in their diets.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20548009?dopt=Abstract
Stroke Risk Grows with Waistlines in U.S.
Women
According to U.S. survey data, rising obesity is associated with rising midlife stroke rates in women,
but not in men.
Towfighi A et al. Stroke 2010 May 27;
Hamburgers, Hot Dogs, and Heart Health
In a meta-analysis of observational data, consumption of processed
meat conferred higher risks for coronary heart disease and diabetes than
consumption of unprocessed red meat.
Micha R et al. Circulation 2010 Jun 1; 121:2271
Is Fast Food Associated with Increasing
Asthma Prevalence?
More-frequent burger consumption is associated
with a higher prevalence of wheezing in children; consumption of fish, fruit, and vegetables
might be protective.
Nagel G et al. Thorax 2010 Jun 65:51
90% of Americans Consume Too Much Sodium
Less
than 10% of Americans meet recommendations for daily sodium consumption, according to an article in MMWR.
Using
NHANES data, CDC researchers
analyzed dietary recall surveys from nearly 4000 adults. Among those whose recommended sodium intake was less than 1500 mg/day
(i.e., those who have hypertension, are 40
years or older, or are black), only 5.5% met that target. All other adults had a target of less than 2300 mg/day, yet only
18.8% of them met that target.
The researchers note that healthcare providers can help patients
design strategies for reducing sodium in their diet.
(Editor's note: The MMWR report was based on sodium recommendations from the 2005 Dietary Guidelines for America. However, the 2010 version, released last week, recommends the <1500 mg/day target for the general
population.)
http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5924a4.htm
Diabetes Associated with Doubling of Risk for Cardiovascular Events
Adults with diabetes face twice the risk for cardiovascular
events as those without diabetes, according to a Lancet meta-analysis.
Using
an international research database, analysts combined data on nearly 700,000 adults from some 100 studies that provided information on diabetes status and
vascular outcomes. At baseline, 7% of participants had diabetes; no participant had previous vascular disease.
During a median 11 years' follow-up,
there were almost 53,000 cardiovascular events, including fatal or nonfatal myocardial infarction, fatal or nonfatal stroke, and other vascular deaths.
Subjects with diabetes had roughly twice the risk for any of these outcomes as those without diabetes. Among people without
diabetes, fasting glucose concentrations above 5.6 mmol/L also increased the risk.
http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(10)60484-9/fulltext
Long-Acting
Exenatide Associated with Better Hemoglobin-Based Diabetes Control
Exenatide, given in once-weekly injections,
showed better control of glycated hemoglobin and led to lower weight in type 2 diabetes than treatment with insulin glargine. The study was conducted by the manufacturer and published in the Lancet.
Researchers
randomized 450 patients with poorly controlled type
2 diabetes to a 26-week supplemental treatment regimen of either once-weekly
injections of long-acting exenatide or daily injections of insulin glargine. By week 8, glycated hemoglobin levels showed greater mean reductions
in the exenatide group — a difference that remained for the rest of the study. By 26 weeks, the absolute reductions
were 1.5% for exenatide and 1.3% for glargine. In addition, weight loss was greater with exenatide, whereas the glargine group
showed progressive weight gain.
Adverse events were more common with exenatide, including
a significant increase in mean heart rate.
Editorialists
call the results a "small step forward," and, with the authors, call for caution in interpreting the findings.
http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(10)60406-0/fulltext
Steroid Dosage and Route in Patients Admitted for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
Oral low-dose use was associated with less treatment failure than was high-dose parenteral use.
Patients admitted for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)
usually receive systemic steroids, which have been associated with better outcomes in several priorrandomized
trials, but the best dose is still in question. Several major clinical practice guidelines recommend low-dose oral
steroids.
In a retrospective
cohort study, based on data from 414 U.S. hospitals, Massachusettsinvestigators
compared outcomes in nearly 80,000 patients admitted for COPD to non–intensive care unit settings. About 74,000 received parenteral steroids (equivalent to a median dose
of 600 mg of prednisone total for the first 2 days), and the rest received oral prednisone (median, 60 mg for the first 2
days). Treatment failure — defined as need formechanical ventilation after
the first 2 days, death, or readmission for COPD within 30 days — occurred in 11% of all patients.
In
analyses adjusted for about 50 clinical and demographic variables, as well as propensity scores, treatment failure was 16% lower in patients who received oral low-dose steroids
than in those who received parenteral steroids; length of stay and cost were about 10% lower in the low-dose group.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20551406?dopt=Abstract
Hypoglycemia
and pneumonia: Another mortality indicator
In a population-based sample of patients with community-acquired
pneumonia, spontaneous admission hypoglycemia was independently
associated with increased mortality during hospitalization that persisted to one year. Patients with hypoglycemia are an easily
identified group that may warrant more intensive inpatient and postdischarge follow-up.The Ameri
http://www.amjmed.com/article/S0002-9343(10)00107-5/fulltext
can Journal of Medicine
Study links NSAID use to increased heart risk in healthy people
Healthy individuals
who use nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs to manage minor pain appear to have the same kind of increased heart risk as
people with cardiovascular disease, Danish researchers reported in Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes. The finding
appears to be consistent with a 2007 scientific statement from the American Heart Association about a relationship between
NSAID use and a higher risk of heart attack and stroke.
http://health.usnews.com/health-news/family-health/heart/articles/2010/06/08/common-pain-relievers-raise-heart-risk-for-healthy-folks_print.html
Which arthritis relief drug causes less gastro damage?
Risk of clinical outcomes throughout the gastrointestinal tract was lower in patients
treated with a COX-2-selective (Cyclo-oxygenase) NSAID (nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs)
than in those receiving a nonselective NSAID plus a PPI (proton-pump inhibitor). These findings should encourage review
of approaches to reduce risk of NSAID treatment.
http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(10)60673-3/abstract
Diclofenac 'Exerts the Same Risk' for Cardiovascular Events as Rofecoxib
Diclofenac (e.g.,
Voltaren), the widely used nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agent, "exerts the same risk for cardiovascular adverse events
as rofecoxib," according to a Danish study published in Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes. (Rofecoxib
[Vioxx] was removed from the market in 2004.)
Using national databases, investigators identified a cohort
of over 1 million healthy individuals aged 10 and older. Over a 9-year period, the investigators tracked the subjects'
use of NSAID therapy within 30 days of a major cardiovascular event.
Use of the nonselective NSAID diclofenac
was associated with an almost twofold increased risk for cardiovascular death (odds ratio,
1.91); in comparison, the odds ratio with rofecoxib was 1.66. There was a dose-dependent increase in risk. Both ibuprofen
and naproxen showed increased stroke risk, although naproxen had the safest overall risk profile.
Acknowledging the
limitations of their observational study, the authors conclude that their findings expose
"a major public health issue." They caution physicians to carefully assess cardiovascular
risks before starting NSAID treatment.
http://click2.nejm.org/cts/click?q=137%3B67407589%3BeiE9g%2FGvnCS%2BA9hM6zkUHU4GkaJ%2Fj6Xi8I88p2FBIcA%3D
New
diagnostic criteria for gestational diabetes mellitus
The Hyperglycemia and Adverse Pregnancy Outcome (HAPO) study was performed to determine internationally agreed upon diagnostic
criteria forgestational diabetes. The International Association of Diabetes and Pregnancy Study Groups recommends the diagnosis be made when
any of the following 3 75-g, 2-hour oral glucose tolerance test thresholds are met or exceeded:
fasting 92 mg/dL, 1-hour 180 mg/dL, or 2 hours 153 mg/dL. American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology
http://www.ajog.org/article/S0002-9378(10)00419-9/fulltext
Weight
gain after 50 seen as raising diabetes risk
A study in the Journal of the
American Medical Association indicates that people who gain significant weight after age 50
are nearly three times as likely to develop Type 2 diabetes. Researchers reviewed data on about 4,200 people over the age
of 65 and also found a relationship between increasing waist circumference and higher diabetes risk.
http://consumer.healthday.com/printer.asp?AID=640414
Vitamin D insufficiency?
Look to genetics.
Variants near genes involved in cholesterol synthesis,
hydroxylation and vitamin D transport affect vitamin D status. Genetic variation at these loci identifies individuals who
have substantially raised risk of vitamin D insufficiency. (Free registration required.) The Lancet
http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(10)60588-0/abstract
Higher "good"
cholesterol is associated with lower cancer risk
U.S.
researchers said that for each 10-point increase in HDL, or "good," cholesterol, a patient's risk of cancer
drops by 36% over about five years. However, researchers said the study, published in the
Journal of the American College of Cardiology,
does not prove cause and effect
http://consumer.healthday.com/Article.asp?AID=640003
Depression is tied
to excess abdominal fat, study finds
A 20-year study of 5,100 individuals ages 18 to 30 showed
that depressed people are more likely to gain excess fat around their waists. Elevated levels
of the stress hormone cortisol, which is associated with depression and weight gain, might explain why people suffering from
depression tend to add abdominal fat, according to one of the researchers. The study was published in the American
Journal of Public Health.
Study links obesity to poor sexual health
A study in BMJ of more than 12,000 people in France showed that obese men and women have fewer sex partners compared
with normal-weight counterparts. The study also showed that obese men have a higher risk of experiencing erectile dysfunction
and contracting a sexually transmitted disease. Obese women were more likely to have an unplanned pregnancy and less likely
to visit a gynecologist. HealthDay News
http://consumer.healthday.com/printer.asp?AID=640149
Study: Asthma risk more than triples in very obese people
A study published in Allergy of 4,500 men and women found that people who were the most obese were more than three
times more likely to have asthma compared with normal-weight peers. The reason for the connection is not clear, researchers
said.
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE64U31W20100601
Folic acid: No effect on cognitive function?
Randomized trials show no effect of folic acid, with or without other B vitamins,
on cognitive function within three years of the start of treatment. Trials of longer duration, recording the incidence of
dementia, as well as cognitive decline, are needed. The American Journal of Medicine
http://www.amjmed.com/article/S0002-9343(10)00131-2/fulltext
Gout drug can treat angina
Allopurinol
seems to be a useful, inexpensive, well-tolerated and safe anti-ischaemic drug for patients with angina. The Lancet
http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(10)60391-1/abstract
Suppressing anger is bad for your heart
This study concluded that coronary artery disease patients who suppress their anger were at increased risk for
adverse cardiac events, and this was accounted for by individual differences in Type D (tendency to experience distress and
to be inhibited) personality. The American Journal of Cardiology
http://www.ajconline.org/article/S0002-9149(10)00101-3/fulltext
Depression patients prefer drugs to talk therapy, survey finds
U.S. patients with depression prefer antidepressants over talk therapy, and the drugs appear
to be as effective, according to a Consumer Reports survey. Patients taking selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, such
as Zoloft and Prozac, reported greater satisfaction and fewer adverse effects compared with those who took serotonin-norepinephrine
reuptake inhibitors. Reuters
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSN0126519620100601
Cholesterol Reduction and the Brain–Heart Connection
A post hoc analysis of SPARCL data
provides additional support for the benefits of statin therapy after a stroke or transient ischemic attack, in terms of both
brain and cardiac protection.
Researchers
previously reported a benefit from 80 mg of atorvastatin daily in preventing recurrent cerebrovascular
and cardiovascular events over 5 years after a first stroke or transient ischemic attack (TIA) in the randomized, placebo-controlled,
manufacturer-sponsored SPARCL trial (N Engl J Med 2006; 355:549; JW Cardiol Aug 30 2006). Now, the authors report subanalysis results. The 4731 participants had documented
elevated LDL levels and stroke or TIA within the prior 6 months and no history or eviden ce of coronary heart disease (CHD).
A handful of randomized patients were not included in the outcomes data for this report.
Rates of major coronary events (MCE) or any CHD
endpoint were significantly lower with atorvastatin compared with placebo: Rates of MCE were 3.4% vs. 5.1%, respectively (absolute risk reduction, 1.7%; number needed to treat [NNT], 59).
Rates of any CHD event were 5.2% and 8.6%, respectively (absolute risk reduction, 3.4%;
NNT, 29). During the course of the study, stroke risk decreased with time but MCE risk remained stable. The rates of MCE and
any CHD were similar between patients with and without carotid disease at baseline.
Statin Efficacy in Elders
Rosuvastatin lowered risk for major cardiovascular events.
Glynn RJ et al. Ann Intern Med 2010 Apr 20; 152:488
Zieman SJ and Ouyang P. Ann Intern
Med 2010 Apr 20; 152:528
Metabolic Syndrome and Risk for Myocardial
Infarction
Risk conferred by metabolic syndrome
was similar to that conferred by diabetes
alone.
Mente A
et al. J Am Coll Cardiol 2010 May 25; 55:2390
Angiotensin-Receptor Blockers
Linked to 'Modest' Increase in Cancer Risk
Angiotensin-receptor blockers (ARBs) are associated
with a modestly increased risk for cancer, according to a meta-analysis published in the Lancet Oncology.
Researchers, examining data from five randomized trials comprising
nearly 62,000 patients, found that those taking ARBs (85% were using telmisartan) had a significantly greater risk for new
cancer than did controls (7.2% vs. 6.0%). When cancer type was analyzed, only lung cancer risk
was significantly increased. The authors estimate that 143 patients would need to be treated for roughly 4 years for one excess
cancer to occur.
The authors call the increase in cancer risk "modest" and the mechanism "uncertain."
In addition, they note that conclusions could not be made regarding the exact risk with individual ARBs.
In an accompanying
commentary, Dr. Steven Nissen says that until we have more data, clinicians "should use
ARBs, particularly telmisartan, with greater caution." He recommends reserving the drugs for patients who cannot tolerate
ACE inhibitors.
http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanonc/article/PIIS1470-2045%2810%2970106-6/abstract
Angiotensin-Receptor Blockers and Cancer: An Inconvenient Truth?
A meta-analysis fuels uncertainty about safety, highlighting an imperative need
for more data.
In 2003, the Candesartan in Heart failure Assessment of Reduction in Mortality and Morbidity (CHARM) investigators
reported a small but significant elevation in the rate of cancer deaths in patients treated with candesartan versus placebo.
Now, U.S. investigators have conducted a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials of
angiotensin-receptor blockers (ARBs) to learn more about their effect on cancer.
Telmisartan was the ARB used in most of the studies. Of the five trials that
included data on new cancer occurrence, the overall cancer rate was higher in the ARB groups than in the control groups (7.2% vs. 6.0%;
relative risk, 1.08; 95% confidence interval, 1.01–1.15). When the analysis was restricted to the three trials in which
cancer was a prespecified endpoint, the excess risk associated with ARBs persisted (RR, 1.11; 95% CI, 1.04–1.18). In
the one study in which patients received concomitant angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE)-inhibitor treatment, ARBs were associated
with a 13% increase in risk for incident cancer (95% CI, 1.03–1.24). The number needed to harm was estimated
to be 143 with 4 years of treatment.
FDA Announces Safety Review of Olmesartan
The FDA is reviewing
the safety of the angiotensin-receptor blocker olmesartan (Benicar) after two ongoing trials
among patients with type 2 diabetes suggested increased risk for cardiovascular death with the drug. For now, the agency
emphasizes that it has not concluded that olmesartan increases the risk for death, and that the drug's benefits
continue to outweigh its risks.
In one trial that prompted the safety review, the incidence of cardiovascular death was 0.67% with olmesartan and 0.14% with placebo. In the other trial, the incidence was 3.5%
and 1.1%, respectively.
The FDA notes that other controlled trials evaluating olmesartan have not indicated
heightened risk for cardiovascular death. The agency advises clinicians to continue prescribing the drug according to its
label, and to report any adverse events to the MedWatch program.
http://www.fda.gov/Drugs/DrugSafety/PostmarketDrugSafetyInformationforPatientsandProviders/ucm215222.htm
Hormone
Replacement Therapy: Patch Less Risky for Stroke than Pill?
The risk for stroke associated with hormone replacement therapy (HRT) in postmenopausal women
seems lower among those on low-dose transdermal regimens, according to a nested case-control
study in BMJ.
From a cohort of almost 900,000 women over age 50, researchers age-matched 16,000
women who had a stroke over a follow-up period averaging 7 years with some 60,000 controls. Current users of oral estrogens,
alone or in combination, had a higher stroke rate than nonusers of HRT.
When comparing oral and transdermal HRT directly, researchers found a lower stroke risk among transdermal
users. However, high-dose patch users (>50 μg of estrogen) actually had a higher risk relative to nonusers (rate ratio,
1.88).
The authors warn that although their results suggest that the low-dose transdermal
route may be safer, they "do not represent definitive evidence."
http://click.jwatch.org/cts/click?q=227%3B67405672%3BS0m3VyqMpx7058JCP3r3ZwS0OMjMXsoZQ0HBBWkfNgk%3D
MP3 Players Associated with Short-Term Hearing Loss
Listening to an MP3 player for just an hour can lead to temporary hearing loss, according to a small study in the
Archives of Otolaryngology—Head & Neck Surgery.
Researchers in Belgium had 21 young adults with normal hearing listen
to pop rock on an MP3 player at comfortable volumes for an hour, on six different occasions at least 2 days apart. The researchers
found that, after listening, subjects experienced significant deterioration in hearing at high and low frequencies. Analyses
revealed that hearing loss was temporary — participants recovered their normal hearing in between listening sessions.
The authors call
for more research but say their findings "indicate the potential harmful effects" of listening to MP3 players.
http://archotol.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/short/136/6/538
Diabetes and Cancer Groups Issue Consensus Report
Experts from the
American Diabetes Association and the American Cancer Society
have published a consensus report on the association between diabetes and some types of cancer
in CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians.
Their observations and recommendations include the following:
- Among the cancers associated with diabetes, the risk is highest for
liver, pancreatic and endometrial cancers (roughly 2-fold or more) and lower for colorectal,
breast, and bladder cancers (about 1.2- to 1.5-fold).
- Possible mechanisms to explain the association include hyperinsulinemia,
hyperglycemia, and inflammation. Shared risk factors
(e.g., obesity, aging, diet) may also play a role.
- Early studies
indicate that metformin may be associated with a lower cancer risk while exogenous insulin
may be associated with a higher risk. (More data are needed to determine whether insulin glargine poses greater risk
than other insulins.)
- Cancer risk should not determine diabetes
treatment in an average patient, but it may be a consideration in a higher-risk patient (e.g., one at risk for recurrence).
http://caonline.amcancersoc.org/cgi/content/full/caac.20078v1
Unintended Effects of Statin Drugs
Kidney failure and cataracts were associated significantly with statin use.
Statins lower risk for adverse cardiovascular events, especially in high-risk
patients. In this large prospective U.K. cohort study, investigators sought to quantify
unintended effects of these widely used drugs.
Of
the more than 2 million study participants (age range, 30–84), about 225,000 were new statin users: 160,000 were prescribed
simvastatin, 50,000 received atorvastatin, and 15,000 received pravastatin, rosuvastatin,
or fluvastatin. Statin use was associated significantly with lower risk for esophageal
cancer and higher risks for liver
dysfunction (alanine transaminase levels 3x upper limit of normal), myopathy (clinical diagnosis or creatinine kinase level 4x upper limit of normal), acute kidney failure,
and cataracts; liver dysfunction and acute kidney failure were dose-dependent. Adverse effects for individual
statins were similar, except for liver dysfunction, in which risk was highest for fluvastatin. All excess risks persisted
during treatment and returned to normal after drug cessation. Statin use was not associated with risk for osteoporotic fracture,
venous thromboembolism, dementia, Parkinson disease, rheumatoid arthritis, or cancers (stomach, lung, breast, colon,
kidney, and prostate cancers or melanoma).
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20488911?dopt=Abstract
Hemoglobin A1c Levels Are Higher in Black Than in White Adults
Black people consistently have higher hemoglobin A1c
(HbA1c) concentrations than do white people, regardless of their underlying glycemia, according to a retrospective,
cross-sectional study in the Annals of Internal Medicine.
Researchers examined
data from two study populations that together comprised some 3500 non-Hispanic black or white adults without known diabetes
who had both glucose and HbA1c concentrations measured. In adjusted analyses, HbA1c levels were significantly
higher (by roughly 0.25 percentage points) among black than white subjects.
The higher HbA1c concentrations
among black participants were noted among subjects who were normoglycemic as well as those who were found to be prediabetic
or diabetic (based on glucose measurements).
The authors conclude: "Until the mechanisms of racial differences
in HbA1c level are understood and can be applied to different persons, clinicians should not limit their assessment
of glycemic control in their patients to measuring HbA1c levels."
http://www.annals.org/content/152/12/770.abstract
Antibiotics for Inpatients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary
Disease
A retrospective study shows several significant benefits.
Patients who are admitted for acute
exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
(COPD) often receive antibiotics, although roughly half
of exacerbations are attributable to viral infections. Most randomized studies supporting antibiotic use are small and old.
Researchers used a U.S. healthcare quality
database to conduct a retrospective cohort study of nearly
85,000 patients admitted for COPD exacerbations. About 10% required mechanical
ventilation, died, or were readmitted for COPD within 30 days. Nearly 80% received at least 2 days of antibiotic
therapy (most commonly with quinolones, cephalosporins, or macrolides). Treated patients
were significantly less likely than untreated patients to receive mechanical ventilation (1.1% vs. 1.8%), die (1.0% vs. 1.6%),
or to be readmitted for COPD (7.9% vs. 8.8%). However, treated patients also had a higher
rate of readmission for Clostridium difficile
infections than untreated patients (0.2% vs. 0.1%). In an analysis adjusted for a wide range of clinical and demographic factors,
composite risk for treatment failure was 13% lower in the treated group.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20501925?dopt=Abstract