Guest guest Posted March 10, 2005 Report Share Posted March 10, 2005 Parecoxib/valdecoxib useful in selected noncardiac-surgery patients? Rheumawire Mar 8, 2005 Sue Orlando, FL - The selective COX-2 inhibitor valdecoxib (Bextra, Pfizer) and its IV prodrug parecoxib (Dynastat, Pfizer) reduce narcotic use postsurgery, and while the drugs should not be used for cardiac-surgery patients because of the increased risk of cardiovascular events, they would still be useful for selected noncardiac-surgery patients, the lead author of 1 of the studies of these drugs said today. Dr Whelton ( Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD) presented data from 2 studies with the drugs1 in CABG patients and 1 in noncardiac-surgery patientsat the late-breaking clinical-trials session at the American College of Cardiology 2005 Scientific Sessions. The studies were funded by Pfizer. Safety data from the CABG study were published online in the New England Journal of Medicine last month1 of 3 papers highlighting the cardiovascular safety issues of the coxibs, which were released ahead of print to coincide with the FDA meeting on the subject. Whelton told rheumawire that safety and efficacy data from both the CABG and general-surgery studies were submitted together to the Journal but that the journal chose to publish only the safety data from the CABG trial, which showed an increase in cardiovascular events with the drugs. " We actually showed some benefits of the drugs in both trials, such as reduced narcotic use, and while I am not advocating that these drugs be used in cardiac-surgery patients, I do not believe that you should look at risk without benefit. It would have been more appropriate to publish both the safety and efficacy results together. Not doing so does a disservice to patients on coxibs, " he said. The noncardiac-surgery study did not show any increased risk of cardiovascular events with the drugs, and while Whelton admits that this does not rule out the possibility of such events, he says the reduced narcotic use seen with these drugs is very useful, and, as traditional nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are not recommended straight after surgery because of bleeding concerns, he believes the coxibs have a place for certain noncardiac-surgery patients. He gave as an example a patient who has been in a traffic accident and has a head injury. " You don't want to give narcotics if there is a concern about brain damage, and a normal NSAID would not be recommended because of the risk of a brain hemorrhage. The intravenous parecoxib could be suitable here. " He added that inadequate postoperative pain control is 1 of the most important factors in prolonging hospitalization and that opioids had their own complications such as nausea/vomiting and ventilatory depression. CABG study The CABG study presented by Whelton involved 1671 CABG patients who were randomized to 1 of 3 arms: Parecoxib 40-mg IV loading dose, then 20 mg IV bid for 3 days, followed by 1 week of oral valdecoxib 20 mg bid. Placebo IV for 3 days followed by 1 week of oral valdecoxib 20 mg bid. Placebo throughout. All groups could have standard painkillers (morphine and acetaminophen/codeine) as required. Safety results showed that cardiovascular events were significantly increased in the parecoxib/valdecoxib group and there was a trend toward an increase in the valdecoxib-alone group. General-surgery study The general-surgery study involved 1062 patients undergoing noncardiac surgery who were randomized to either parecoxib and valdecoxib (at the same dosage regimen as in group 1 of the CABG trial) or placebo. Again, all patients could have standard painkillers as required. Safety results showed no difference in cardiovascular events (1% in both groups), and efficacy results showed a similar reduction in narcotic consumption as seen in the CABG trial with the coxibs. " House of cards " Discussing the studies at the late-breaking clinical-trial session, Dr Topol (Cleveland Clinic, OH) noted that the CABG data added to the " house of cards " that was the coxibs. He pointed out that this is not the only CABG trial to have shown an increased risk of cardiac events with the coxibs and that this risk occurred despite the use of aspirin. " Aspirin is not protective against these events, " he said. He also noted that the risk of stroke/MI was still increased in the CABG trial after the drugs were discontinued and that there was no reduction in GI events with the drugs and a suggestion of increased sternal wound complications. On Whelton's presentation, Topol commented to rheumawire: " My concern is that he didn't present the fact that sternal wound infections were worsened, that GI complications weren't avoided, and that the warning should extend far beyond the open-heart CABG story to all patients at risk of having documented coronary disease. " Delayed wound healing? On the issue of sternal complications, Whelton told rheumawire that a previous smaller study in CABG patients (by Ott et al) had shown a significant increase in sternal wound complications with coxibs, so they specifically looked for this in these studies. While there was a trend toward delayed wound healing with the drugs, this did not reach significance. Whelton said that he was expecting to see a greater effect, as there was a biological explanationcoxibs inhibit inflammation, which is needed in wound healing. " I thought we would see a significant effect, as it would fit with the biology, but I think we can say that if there is a problem with wound healing it is only a mild problem, " he commented. Not an MD I'll tell you where to go! Mayo Clinic in Rochester http://www.mayoclinic.org/rochester s Hopkins Medicine http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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