500 likes | 700 Views
PARGLUVA ® ( Muraglitazar) Bristol-Myers Squibb and Merck & Co., Inc. New Drug Application 21-865 . Clinical Safety Julie Golden, M.D. Medical Officer Division of Metabolic and Endocrine Drug Products September 9, 2005 Silver Spring, MD. Center for Drug Evaluation and Research. Outline.
E N D
PARGLUVA® (Muraglitazar)Bristol-Myers Squibb and Merck & Co., Inc.New Drug Application 21-865 Clinical Safety Julie Golden, M.D. Medical Officer Division of Metabolic and Endocrine Drug Products September 9, 2005 Silver Spring, MD Center for Drug Evaluation and Research
Outline • Background • Subject Disposition • Safety Issues • Concerns/Points to Consider • Questions for Discussion
Regulatory Issues • First PPAR-γ (troglitazone) removed from the market in 2000 due to cases of idiosyncratic liver failure • PPARs and carcinogenicity: all clinical studies > 6 mo currently on clinical hold unless preclinical carcinogenicity studies submitted to the Agency
Background • Safety profile of muraglitazar is generally consistent with PPAR-γ and PPAR-α pharmacology • Potential concerns with PPAR compounds • PPAR-γ: edema, weight gain, congestive heart failure, anemia, neutropenia • PPAR-α: myopathy, cholelithiasis
Clinical Safety Database • 22 Clinical Pharmacology Studies • 6 Phase 2b and 3 Studies • 5 Type 2 Diabetes Studies • 2 Monotherapy • 3 Combination Therapy • 1 Mixed Dyslipidemia Study
Clinical Safety Database • 3226 subjects received at least one dose of muraglitazar in the Phase 2/3 studies • Type 2 diabetes: 2969 • Monotherapy: 1560 • Combination therapy: 1409 • ~ 2000 subjects received muraglitazar for at least 24 weeks • ~ 700 subjects received muraglitazar for at least 104 weeks
Pooling • Muraglitazar ≤ 5 mg: • CV168006: Mur 0.5 mg, 1.5 mg, 5 mg (titration possible) • Phase 3 Studies: Mur 2.5 and 5 mg • Pioglitazone ≤ 45 mg: • CV168006: Pio 15 mg (titration to 45 mg possible) • CV168025: Pio 30 mg
Pooling • Monotherapy: CV168006 and CV168018 • Combination therapy • CV168021: + glyburide • CV168022 and CV168025: + metformin
AEs Leading to Discontinuation,Type 2 Diabetes Studies 24 Weeks
Safety Issues • Deaths • Edema Events • Heart Failure Events • Weight Gain • Cardiovascular Events
Cardiovascular Deaths • 52 yo male (Mur 2.5 + Met): myocardial infarction • 54 yo male (Mur 5 + Met): myocardial infarction* • 67 yo male (Mur 5 + Met): sudden death • 53 yo male (Mur 5 + Met): stroke • 56 yo female (Mur 5 + Gly): myocardial infarction • 66 yo female (Mur 5 + Met): sudden death* • 61 yo male (Mur 5 + Met): “found dead” • 60 yo female (Mur 5 + Met): stroke • 59 yo male (Mur 20): myocardial infarction* • 62 yo male (Placebo + Gly): pulmonary embolism
Subject CV168022-153-2Muraglitazar 5 mg + metformin • 54 year-old white male with 6-year history of type 2 diabetes, obesity, hypertension, coronary artery disease, and coronary thrombosis • Day 115: CHF symptoms • 1 day hospitalization, single dose of furosemide 40 mg I.V. • Day 117: normal chest x-ray • Day 118: • body weight increase of 10 lbs. from Day 90 • elevated NT-proBNP (1236 pg/mL; screening 548 pg/mL) • physical exam and outpatient cardiac exam refused • Day 125: found dead in home • death certificate: myocardial infarction and occult coronary artery disease
Subject CV168025-193-9Muraglitazar 5 mg + metformin • 66 year-old white female with 4-year history of type 2 diabetes, CHF, hypertension, peripheral vascular disease, transient ischemic attack, bilateral lower extremity fluid retention, atrial flutter, mitral insufficiency, obesity, and tobacco use • Day 201: dyspnea; reported as CHF • Day 202: sudden death • autopsy not performed; cause of death reported as myocardial infarction
Subject CV168006-11-8Muraglitazar 20 mg • 59 year old white male with 2-year history of type 2 diabetes, previous tobacco use, hypertension, iron overload with fatty liver, and psoriasis • Day 43: bilateral pitting edema in ankles • Day 49: admitted with myocardial infarction and CHF • increasing exertional dyspnea for the previous month • markedly elevated cardiac enzyme levels • clinical deterioration; intubation • Day 50: • cardiac catheterization: 99% left main arterial distal stenosis • echocardiogram: moderately dilated left ventricle with severe global hypokinesis; ejection fraction 15 - 20% • Day 60: life support withdrawn; patient died
Cancer Deaths • 69 yo male (Mur 1.5): lung cancer • 69 yo female (Mur 1.5): acute myeloid leukemia • 49 yo male (Mur 2.5 + Met): hepatocellular carcinoma • 56 yo female (Mur 5 + Met): breast cancer • 70 yo female (Mur 5): lung cancer • 63 yo female (Mur 5 + Met): lung cancer • 50 yo female (Mur 5 + Met): pancreatic cancer • 66 yo male (Pio 15): throat cancer
Deaths 5 cardiovascular deaths from 3 sites (out of 234): Site 193 = Netherlands, 2 deaths, 8 randomized subjects Site 241 = Russia, 2 deaths, 38 randomized subjects Site 314 = Finland, 1 death, 2 randomized subjects
Edema-Related Predefined Preferred Terms • Fluid retention/overload • Generalized edema • Peripheral edema • Swelling • Hypervolemia
Congestive Heart Failure: Monotherapy vs. Combination TherapyType 2 Diabetes Studies24 Weeks
CHF Adjudication Committee:Predefined Preferred Terms • Cardiac failure • Pulmonary edema • Ventricular failure • Dyspnea • Edema (moderate or greater intensity)
Cardiovascular Adverse Events: Predefined Preferred Terms • Myocardial infarction • Coronary revascularization • Coronary artery disease • Angina/myocardial ischemia • Cardiac death • Stroke • Transient ischemic attack * NOT congestive heart failure
Cardiovascular Adverse Events Type 2 Diabetes Studies24 Weeks
Cardiovascular Events: Monotherapy vs. Combination TherapyType 2 Diabetes Studies, 24 Weeks
Muraglitazar 2.5 mg: 64 yo M: Non-Q wave MI, day 85 52 yo F: TIA, day 31 64 yo M: Unstable angina, day 11 59 yo F: Stroke, day 9 Muraglitazar 5 mg: 68 yo M: MI, day 1 (prior to first dose) 54 yo F: Stroke, d26; Brain tumor, day 43 62 yo M: Coronary artery disease, day 111 70 yo M: Angina, days 17, 37, 56, and 66 52 yo F: TIA, day 78 46 yo M: Myocardial ischemia, day 85 60 yo M: Stroke, day 139 Cardiovascular Events: Study CV16802124 Weeks
Inclusion/Exclusion Criteria • No history of MI, coronary angioplasty or bypass graft(s), valvular disease or repair, unstable angina pectoris, TIA or cerebrovascular accidents within 6 months prior to entry into the study • Monotherapy: No antihyperglycemic therapy more than 3 consecutive or a total of 7 non-consecutive days 4-6 weeks prior to Screening • Combination Therapy: Receiving treatment with sulfonylurea (CV168021) or metformin (CV168022, CV168025) for at least 6 weeks prior to Screening
Baseline Characteristics ª Includes all doses of muraglitazar except OL
Deaths • Most deaths in the muraglitazar-treatment group were due to cardiovascular events and cancer • Congestive heart failure may have contributed to the cardiac event leading to death in 3 subjects on muraglitazar • No clear pattern has emerged
Deaths • Most cardiovascular deaths were from one study • CV168025: metformin add-on, active control • 5 cardiovascular deaths from 3 study sites
Cardiovascular Events • Diverse events with no clear pattern • Increased incidence in combination studies • Imbalance driven by one study • CV168021: glyburide add-on, placebo-controlled study
Cardiovascular Events • When combination studies pooled, events were not dose-related • Inconsistent rate of events in placebo groups from combination studies • Low number of events, particularly in comparator groups, make incidence rates unstable
Questions for Discussion • Is it likely that the excess of cardiovascular deaths and events in the muraglitazar group are related to the dose-related fluid retention? • If not, is there a plausible pharmacological explanation? • Are subjects on combination therapy (i.e., longer history of diabetes) or with a relevant medical history more vulnerable to the adverse effects of muraglitazar? • Cardiovascular events • Fluid-related events
Medical Review Team Robert Misbin, M.D. Eric Colman, M.D. David Orloff, M.D. Statistical Review Team Lee Ping Pian, Ph.D. J. Todd Sahlroot, Ph.D. Project Management Jena Weber Pharmacology/Toxicology Review Team John Colerangle, Ph.D. Jeri El Hage, Ph.D. Biopharmaceutics Review Team Jaya Vaidyanathan, Ph.D. Hae Young Ahn, Ph.D. Acknowledgements