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Parkinson's drugs can cause heart damage - studies
Thu Jan 4, 2007 7:25 AM IST
By Gene Emery and Toni Clarke
BOSTON (Reuters) - Two Parkinson's disease drugs cause the same kind of
heart damage that led to the withdrawal of the diet drug combination
"fen-phen," according to two studies published on Wednesday.
Patients taking the drugs pergolide, developed by Eli Lilly & Co. and sold
under the brand name Permax, and cabergoline, developed by Pfizer Inc. and
sold under the brand Dostinex, had a sharply higher risk of heart valve
damage than those taking other therapies, the studies said.
The studies, one of which analyzed the records of 11,417 patients in Britain
and one of which tested 245 patients in Italy, reinforce the results of
earlier, smaller studies showing drugs that activate a cellular receptor
known as 5-HT2b can cause damage to the heart valve, a serious condition
that can lead to heart failure and sudden death.
"We recommend that physicians not prescribe drugs that have this biochemical
property," said Bryan Roth, a researcher at the University of North
Carolina, Chapel Hill, who was not involved in the trials, but viewed the
data and commented on it in The New England Journal of Medicine, where both
studies appeared.
Michael Berelowitz, a Pfizer senior vice president, said cabergoline has
very modest sales and is only approved in the United States for
hyperprolactinemia -- a condition in which excessive amounts of the hormone
prolactin enter the bloodstream due to benign tumors of the pituitary gland.
He said benefits of the Pfizer drug, which is sold in Europe for Parkinson's
disease, as well as hyperprolactinemia, outweigh the increased risk of heart
valve damage, which is noted in the drug's package insert label.
Lilly officials could not immediately be reached for comment.
Such drugs also include the migraine headache drug ergotamine and the
amphetamine derivative known as "ecstasy."
Roth said his team, in a separate piece of research that has yet to be
published or reviewed by the scientific community, has identified several
other big-selling drugs that have until now not been known to activate the
5-HT2b receptor.
He declined to reveal the names of the drugs until the research has been
published.
"We recommend that every drug be screened at this receptor before it goes
into humans," Roth told Reuters in an interview. "It costs just pennies per
drug for such a screen."
The British study showed patients taking pergolide were 7.1 times more
likely to develop heart valve damage than those who took other treatments.
Patients taking the highest doses of the drug had a 37 times greater risk.
The study showed patients taking cabergoline were 4.9 times more likely to
develop heart valve damage. At higher doses patients were 50.3 times more
likely to suffer damage.
Both drugs are available in generic form.
A second study, conducted in Italy, tested 245 people, of whom 155 had
Parkinson's disease. Of the diseased population, one group received
pergolide, one group received cabergoline and one group received an
alternative Parkinson's treatment. The non-diseased control group received
nothing.
The results showed that 23.4 percent of patients taking pergolide and 28.6
percent of patients taking cabergoline suffered heart damage, compared with
just 5.6 percent in the control group.
"These are huge risks," said Roth.
He added they were similar to the kind of damage seen with fen-phen, whose
main ingredients were withdrawn in 1997 and forced the drug-maker Wyeth to
take more than $21 billion in charges to cover liabilities.
Wyeth's recalled drugs were fenfluramine, or Pondimin, and dexfenfluramine,
or Redux. To make fen-phen, one or the other was combined with another drug
called phentermine that is still sold by other companies.
Wyeth, then called American Home Products, recalled Pondimin and Redux after
some of the 6 million Americans who had taken fen-phen developed heart-valve
problems.
Roth said pergolide is also used to treat restless leg syndrome, a condition
in which patients feel a crawling sensation in their legs combined with a
need to move them.
(Additional reporting by Ransdell Pierson in New York)
© Reuters 2007. All Rights Reserved.

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