Government and Regulations

FDA will strengthen heart attack, stroke risk warnings for all NSAIDs


 

References

The Food and Drug Administration has taken new action to strengthen existing warning labels about the increased risk of heart attack or stroke with the use of prescription and over-the-counter nonaspirin nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs.

In a July 9 drug safety communication, the agency did not provide the exact language that will be used on NSAID labels, but said that they “will be revised to reflect” information describing that:

• The risk of heart attack or stroke can occur as early as the first weeks of using an NSAID.

• The risk may increase with longer use and at higher doses of the NSAID.

Courtesy Wikimedia Commons/FitzColinGerald/Creative Commons License

• The drugs can increase the risk of heart attack or stroke even in patients without heart disease or risk factors for heart disease, but patients with heart disease or risk factors for it have a greater likelihood of heart attack or stroke following NSAID use.

• Treatment with NSAIDs following a first heart attack increases the risk of death in the first year after the heart attack, compared with patients who were not treated with NSAIDs after their first heart attack.

• NSAID use increases the risk of heart failure.

The new wording will also note that although newer information may suggest that the risk for heart attack or stroke is not the same for all NSAIDs, it “is not sufficient for us to determine that the risk of any particular NSAID is definitely higher or lower than that of any other particular NSAID.”

*The update to NSAID labels follows the recommendations given by panel members from a joint meeting of the FDA’s Arthritis Advisory Committee and the Drug Safety and Risk Management Advisory Committee in February 2014 in which there was a split vote (14-11) that was slightly in favor of rewording the warning labeling for NSAIDs in regard to the drug class’s current labeling, which implies that the cardiovascular thrombotic risk is not substantial with short treatment courses. At that meeting, the panelists also voted 16-9 that there were not enough data to suggest that naproxen presented a substantially lower risk of CV events than did either ibuprofen or selective NSAIDs, such as cyclooxygenase-2 inhibitors.

The FDA made its decision based on a comprehensive review of the data presented during that meeting.

*Correction, 7/16/2015: An earlier version of this story misstated the FDA panels’ recommendation for labeling changes.

jevans@frontlinemedcom.com

Recommended Reading

Hot flashes in younger women may signal cardiac risk
MDedge ObGyn
Apple’s ResearchKit
MDedge ObGyn
Gout increases risk of vascular disease, especially for women
MDedge ObGyn
Class of 2015: New drugs projected to earn billions and billions
MDedge ObGyn
Newer oral contraceptives pose higher VTE risk
MDedge ObGyn
Experts: Office workers should stand more
MDedge ObGyn
Newborn’s pulmonary hypertension risk up slightly after SSRI exposure in pregnancy
MDedge ObGyn
Uncomplicated pregnancies in women with lupus may not boost risk for CV events
MDedge ObGyn
FDA tells food producers to cut the trans fat
MDedge ObGyn
Study quantifies risks linked to cardiac multimorbidity
MDedge ObGyn

Related Articles