FDA probes safety of popular heart stent

(AP)
Updated: 2006-12-04 13:42

If it weren't for Swiss efficiency, the risk might not be known. Switzerland's government required a study to prove the new stents were worth their cost - $2,200 to $2,700 versus $600 to $800 for old ones - and to test how long Plavix should be taken. This produced the bombshell finding that patients with coated stents had double the risk of cardiac problems after stopping Plavix than those with plain metal stents.

"Everyone has been scrambling around looking in their databases" to see if it's true in their patients, said Dr. Christopher Cannon of Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, who consults for Sanofi-Aventis SA, which sells Plavix in the US with Bristol-Myers Squibb.

Many such hospital registry studies have now been reported. Two presented at a recent American Heart Association meeting were provocative.

Dr. Joseph B. Muhlestein at the University of Utah found that deaths and heart attacks were higher with coated stents after three years and that their advantage for preventing artery reclosure disappeared by that time. Doctors in the Netherlands found that the devices were comparable after three years.

"It's led me to wonder maybe we're being too aggressive" in using the new stents, Muhlestein said.

Hospital registries help, but are not solid proof like randomized studies where similar patients are assigned to get one treatment or another. The best picture yet of risk may come from an analysis of pooled results from 14 randomized studies by Dr. Deepak Bhatt at the Cleveland Clinic. Published Wednesday in the American Journal of Medicine, it found that coated stents had five times the risk of clots as plain metal ones.

Some doctors say stents were approved based on studies that were too small, too short and in low-risk patients. Doctors also have used them for cases other than the types of blockages for which they were approved. Success is being further undermined by many patients quitting Plavix too soon.

"They just don't understand how important it is to continue," said Dr. Sidney Smith of the University of North Carolina, past president of the American Heart Association.

Longer Plavix treatment now is being urged "a little bit to get the doctor off the hook," said Dr. David Williams of Brown University. "We're saying indefinite for some patients even though we have no idea what that means" in terms of safety, he acknowledged.

"I find that a very unsettling recommendation," said Dr. Spencer King, a cardiologist at Fuqua Heart Center in Piedmont Hospital in Atlanta and past president of the American College of Cardiology.

Plavix carries a risk of serious bleeding, he noted. Requiring coated stent patients to take it indefinitely puts them at risk of a clot if they have to temporarily stop Plavix to prevent excessive bleeding before a hip replacement or other surgery. Already, there are reports of people suffering such clots when going off Plavix for colonoscopies.

Many people can't afford Plavix. Medicare doesn't cover it unless people have the supplemental drug benefit, and half of angioplasties are done in people over 65.

"In the whole saga, the most important thing comes down to whether the patient is going to take Plavix or not," said Dr. Samin Sharma of Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York.

More research is needed to clarify the drug's role, Cannon said.

"There's a risk that's there when you don't have (Plavix). What we don't have are studies that show what's the risk with it," he said.


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