Title: Droperidol Since 2001 FDA Risk Assessment
1Droperidol Since 2001FDA Risk Assessment
- Anesthetic and Life Support Drugs
- Advisory Committee
- November 18, 2003
- Nancy Chang, M.D.
- Lead Medical Officer
- Division of Anesthetic, Critical Care and
- Addiction Drug Products
Center for Drug Evaluation and Research
2Droperidol - revised data sheet cardiac
arrhythmias
- France. The Medicines Agency has revised the data
sheet for pharmaceutical products containing
droperidol following a national enquiry that
examined 26 reports of sudden deaths and cardiac
arrhythmias associated with its use since 1967.
The deaths occurred within 15 minutes of
administration in 10 cases, and acute alcoholism
was reported in 11 cases. - The dosage used was 15 ml at 100 mg
(intramuscular), whereas the dosage currently
prescribed for agitation is 10 mg to be repeated
every 4 to 6 hours as necessary. - The incidence of sudden deaths is estimated as 1
per 55,000 vials. - A "Dear Doctor" letter has also been sent to
prescribers. - Reference Communication from the Agence du
Médicament, 7 May 1997.
3Droleptan medicinal products will be discontinued
from 31 March 2001. This action has been taken
by Janssen-Cilag Ltd, who has chosen to
voluntarily discontinue Droleptan following an
extensive risk-benefit assessment. The company
concluded that the oral formulations should be
discontinued to prevent use in chronic conditions
and that the injectable form would no longer be
commercially viable. The Medicines Control Agency
(MCA) had raised concerns about the potential
effect of droperidol on the cardiac QT interval
and requested the risk-benefit assessment. ---MCA
, Jan 2001
4Postmarketing spontaneous reports
- QT prolongation, torsades, cardiac arrest,
ventricular tachycardia, ventricular
fibrillation, ventricular arrythmia, sudden death - 89 events, 46 fatal
5QT and/or Torsadespostmarketing events
- 22 cases, at least 5 fatal
- 14 torsades (incl 6 with QT)
- Route injection (n20) oral (n1) unk (n1)
- Dose for single inj. (N13)
- 0.625 (n2) 1.25 (n2) 2.5 (n3)
- 3.75-5 (n2) 12.5 (n1) 21-25 (n3)
- Onset (N14) immed-several minutes (n4) 10 min
(n3) 4-12 hours (n3) same day (n2) in ER
(n1).
6Dose ? 2.5 mgpostmarketing events(events are
not mutually exclusive)
7Case Example 1
- 60 yo F
- Droperidol 0.625 mg for nausea, had QT interval
prolongation
8Case Example 2
- 44 yo F, 115
- Droperidol 1.25 mg for nausea in ER (UTI)
- then suffered adverse side effects including qt
prolongation, chest pain, difficulty breathing,
dizziness, extreme agitation, etc. - PMH none
- Meds Levaquin 500 mg
9Case Example 3
- 52 yo M, Transjugular intrahepatic PSS 6/10/94
- IV Droperidol 1.25 mg 1030, SR
- 1.25 mg 1126, SR w/ PVCs
- 1.25 mg 1206, SR
- Procedure complete 1506, to unit 1630
- 1915 Torsades, VF, then cardiac arrest,
successfully defibrillated x2 (200, 300J), no
evid ischemia, expired 6/18 unrelated - PMH ETOH, cirrhosis/ascites, varices, Tob, COPD
- Meds Gent/Vanco, fent 550 mg total, versed 4mg
total, KCl 40mEq, heparin 3000U IV
10Literature
- Lischke et al, 1994 0.1, 0.175, 0.25 mg/kg
- median QTc increases 37, 44, 58 msec
- Guy et al 1991
- Case 12.5 mg IV gt TdP rechallenge
- Study, 55 pts, 0.25 mg/kg QT 387 gt 423 ms
- Reilly et al 2000 Psych pts
- 6/37 with QTc gt 456 msec
- Droperidol signif predictor of abnl QTc
- Frye et al 1995 2 case reports
- ICU 5-20 mg/hr, QTc 400gt476 437gt560
11- GP hearts, GP ventric myocytes, HERG/HEK293
- Significant effect down to 10 nM (4 ng/mL) (IC50
30nM) - Peak 60 ng/mL 1 hr after 5-mg IM (Cressman et al,
1973) - gt 11 ug/mL peak after 10 mg IV (Lehman et al,
1988) - J. Cardiovasc Electrophys 1999 10
Acrobat Document
12Summary
- There is good evidence of a causal relationship
between droperidol and QTc prolongation/TdP. - QTc effect at low doses is not known.
- QTc effect appears to be dose dependent.
- Serious cardiac AEs have occurred at doses at
and below the lowest labeled dose no clear
safety margin
13Risk-Benefit Analysis
- Benefits
- Disease/symptoms being treated
- Alternative therapies (availability, safety and
efficacy) - Risks
- Patient population
- Predictability (dose, population, setting,
interactions) - Safety margin
- Manageability (role of labeling)
- Reversibility
- Nature/consequence of adverse events (TdP)
- Incidence of adverse events
14Incidence of adverse events (pre-approval)
- Small numbers
- Limited population
- Changes in clinical practice standards over time
- Changes in regulatory standards over time
- 47 fatalities
15Incidence of adverse events(post-marketing)
- What is the denominator?
- Peak sales 10 million vials in 2001
- Moving target
- of exposures? of patients?
- Dose/duration/setting/concomitants?
16What is the numerator?
- Polling - what is the right question?
17What is the numerator? (cont)
- Amar et al, Anesth Analg 2002 412 thoracic
- 15 with ?1 episode VT postop (to 3-4 d)
- OKelly et al, JAMA 1992
- 230 major noncardiac surgery (CAD/CAD risk)
- 44 periop freq/major V arrhyth (gt30 VEB/hr, VT)
- Forrest et al, Anesth 1992 17,201 gen healthy
- 6.3 periop V dysrhyth
- Lagasse 2002 2 university-based practices
- 1532 periop mortality (232 deaths/2 yrs)
- Newland et al 2002 10 yr., teaching hospital
- 0.2 incidence cardiac arrests (144 cases)
18Under-reporting is expected
- Postmarketing safety reporting is voluntary
- Approved 1970
- Anesthesiologists do not routinely monitor QT
- High incidence of perioperative dysrhythmias
- Complex setting - multiple concomitants
- Submitted reports are often incomplete
- QT/torsades were not in AE lexicons until 1980s
19Probability of at least 1 event
- Incidence 1/1000
- 50 cases 5
- 1000 cases 63
- Incidence 1/10,000
- 50 cases 0.5
- 1000 cases 9.5
- 6000 cases 45
20Rule of 3
- If no events are observed, upper bound for
incidence is ? 3/n (95 confidence). - To rule out events of 1/10,000 incidence with 95
confidence, a clinical trial of 30,000 would be
required.
21Alternatives
- Alternatives available from multiple drug classes
- Different uses with regard to dose/setting/populat
ion and limitations in safety analyses make
direct comparisons difficult - No clear safety or efficacy advantage of
droperidol
22Immediate Interventions
- Discussions with Akorn
- Risk assessment of alternatives
- Label changes (in cooperation with sponsor)
- Boxed warning (second line, patient population,
monitoring) - Indications
- Dosage
- DHCP letter FDA Talk Paper
23Importance of the label
- Regulations/FDA mandate
- Implications of labeling
- marketing
- evidence of safety and effectiveness
- safe use
- medical liability
2421 CFR 201.57
25The disconnect between clinical practice and
labeling
- Clinicians dont practice according to labeling.
- dosing and indications examples
- cisapride example
- How to convey new information that may call for
changes in practice?
26Ongoing/future interventions
- Ongoing risk assessment of droperidol and
alternatives - Clinical stud(ies)
- ALSDAC meeting
- Dialog with practitioner community
27Might the setting of use reduce risk?
- Monitored patients
- Trained personnel
- Resources for rapid intervention
- Acute, generally single dosing
28Factors that may increase risk in the
perioperative setting
- Co-morbidities
- Ubiquitous co-medication
- QT monitoring is not part of routine practice
- Use in other settings
- fast track outpatient procedures
- non-OR procedures (e.g. GI, cardiac, radiology)
- unmonitored inpatient
29Miscellaneous Issues
- Alternative drugs that prolong QT
- Use of lower doses
- The boxed warning is NOT about doses of
droperidol lt2.5 mg. - The use of droperidol doses less than 2.5 mg is
considered OFF LABEL use - Adequate data have not been submitted to the
Agency to make a determination of safety and
efficacy at lt 2.5 mg - The Agency is making no statement about the
safety or lack of safety at these doses
30Miscellaneous Issues (cont.)
- Emphasis on case reports
- pointcounterpoint (predisposing factors, timing,
etc.) - The case reports were only considered to be
supportive of the boxed warning. They were not
the basis for it. - Emphasis on lower doses
- Significance of boxed warnings
31Ongoing Concerns
- There is strong evidence that droperidol can
cause QTc prolongation and TdP in humans - Outlier responses may occur down to 2.5 mg
- Outlier responses may be associated with silent
mutations and be apparently idiosyncratic - Predisposing mutations/polymorphisms may be as
prevalent as several - Difficulties in obtaining definitive safety data