Cholesterol Drug Pulled From Market
Aug. 8 -- Drug maker Bayer pulled its popular cholesterol-lowering medication off the market today amid reports of a deadly side effect.
According to the Food and Drug Administration., Bayer Pharmaceuticals voluntarily withdrew Baycol, known generically as cerivastatin, as a result of the 31 patients deaths associated with the drug over the last four years.
The drug's rare side effect, rhabdomyolysis, destroys muscle cells then releases them into the bloodstream and can cause severe muscle pain, frequently in the calves or lower back. In rare instances the effects are so severe, patients develop potentially fatal kidney or other organ failure.
Symptoms of the condition include muscle pain, weakness, tenderness, fever, dark urine, nausea and vomiting.
Particular Risks
Approved in 1997, Baycol is part of a class of cholesterol-lowering drugs called statins. Experts say rhabdomyolysis is a known side-effect of all statins.
According to Paul Doering of the University of Florida's College of Pharmacy, the drugs have remained on the market because "the positive benefits of the drug outweigh the rare frequency of occurrence."
But Baycol stands out because it has caused a significantly higher number of reported deaths, especially when used in high doses, in elderly patients, and particularly when combined with another cholesterol-lowering drug called gemfibrozil, also known as LOPID.
Doering blames the FDA's approval process for today's recall: "This recall highlights a broader problem, and that is the inability of the drug approval process to predict what the true nature of any drug is, based solely on the data required for an NDA [new drug application].
"It has taken this long for enough data to accumulate for the FDA to finally drop the ax. This begs the question: What is the threshold after which the benefits no longer outweigh the risks? The answer, of course, would depend on the drug and the disease which it treats."
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