Title: Non-Prescription Mevacor
1Non-Prescription MevacorMerck Co., Inc.New
Drug Application 21-213
- Nonprescription Drugs and Endocrinologic and
Metabolic Drugs Advisory Committee Meeting - Silver Spring, Maryland
- December 13, 2007
- Eric Colman, MD
- Division of Metabolism and Endocrinology Products
Center for Drug Evaluation and Research
2Objective
- To discuss FDAs evaluation of data mining
signals for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS)
with statins - Background
- ALS
- What is data mining?
- FDA data mining signal scores for ALS with
statins - FDAs evaluation of the data mining signals
- Next steps
3FDA Observes Data Mining Signal for ALS with
Statins
- Earlier this year members from numerous offices
and divisions within the Center for Drug
Evaluation and Research met to discuss data
mining signals for ALS and statins observed in
FDAs Adverse Event Reporting System (AERS) - Available data did not justify regulatory action
- Make evaluation publicly available
- Manuscript in progress
4Edwards, et al.Drug Safety June, 2007
5Edwards, et al.
.we hope that this signal for an ALS-like
syndrome with statins will be accepted not as
anything more than a hypothesis that needs to be
followed up to ensure the safer use of an
important group of medicines.
6Wall Street Journal July, 2007
7Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
- Progressive destruction of motor neurons with
retraction of axons from neuromuscular junction - Often presents with muscle weakness
- Annual incidence 1.5 to 2 cases per 100,000
- Incidence increases with age
- Males gt females
- Etiology unknown
8Drug Safety Data Mining
- Definition the use of computer algorithms to
analyze adverse event data in a large, complex
database - FDAs Adverse Event Reporting System (AERS)
- Spontaneously-submitted adverse events from
healthcare professionals, consumers, and drug
companies - Goal to identify reporting relationships that
could signal possible adverse drug reactions - Data mining CAN generate hypotheses regarding
adverse drug reactions - Data mining CANNOT prove or refute causal
associations between drugs and adverse reactions
9Proportional Reporting Ratios
Reports With Adverse Event Y Reports Without Adverse Event Y
Drug X a b ab
All Other Drugs c d cd
ac bd total
- Observed/Expected
- a/(ab)/c/(cd)
10Example
Reports With Pancreatitis Reports Without Pancreatitis
Lipovent 10 200 10/10200
All Other Drugs In AERS 3 2000 3/32000
Observed ratio of pancreatitis reports for
Lipovent 10/10 200 0.048
Expected ratio of pancreatitis reports for
Lipovent 3/3 2000 0.001
Proportional reporting ratio 0.048/0.001 48
11Data Mining Terminology
- EBGM is the Empirical Bayes Geometric Mean - an
adjusted estimate of the mean proportional
reporting ratio that addresses small cell counts - EB05 lower bound of confidence interval
- EB95 upper bound of confidence interval
12What Constitutes a Data Mining Signal?
- Criteria not written in stone
- EB05 gt 2
- EBGM gt 2
- Consider the whole range of scores for new drugs
or very serious outcomes
13FDA Data Mining Signal Scores for Statins and ALS
Ingredient EBGM EB05 EB95
Pravastatin 2.7 1.4 5.0
Fluvastatin 1.6 0.5 4.1
Atorvastatin 9.3 7.0 12.1
Cerivastatin 3.8 2.5 5.7
Lovastatin 2.5 1.0 5.7
Simvastatin 4.4 3.0 6.4
Rosuvastatin 2.4 1.2 4.4
EBGM is not an odds ratio or a measure of
relative or absolute risk EBGM is not a
causality score
14What Did FDA Do In Response to the Data Mining
Signals for ALS and Statins?
- Reviewed
- AERS reports of ALS
- Statin clinical trial data
- Population-based ALS incidence data
15Review of AERS Reports of ALS
- All reports reviewed by a safety evaluator and
two neurologists - 57 domestic reports
- Mean age 67 years
- 39 70 79 years old
- 53 male
- Clinical course after statin D/Cd
- 84 no improvement
- 2 improved
- 14 unknown
- Most reports received by FDA during or after 2000
- Initial Reporter Source
- 53 non-healthcare consumer
- 33 physician
- 11 non-physician healthcare provider
16Retrospective Analyses of Statin Clinical Trials
- 42 placebo-controlled trials of all marketed
statins 6 months to 5 years in duration - Primary and secondary CAD prevention
- 200,000 person-years statin exposure
- 200,000 person-years placebo exposure
- 9 cases of ALS in statin groups
- 9 cases of ALS in placebo groups
- 4.3 cases per 100,000 vs. 4.6 cases per 100,000
17Statin Use ALS Incidence
- Use of statins has increased steadily since early
1990s - Has the incidence of ALS increased?
- Data from Rochester, MN
- Before 1990 1.5 cases per 100,000 people per
year (1.1 to 2.0) - After 1990 1.9 cases per 100,000 people per year
(1.0 to 2.8) - Sorenson EJ, et al. Neurology.
- 200259(2)280-282.
Dispensed prescriptions by US retail pharmacies.
Verispan Vector One National, Years 1991-2006,
Extracted October 2007
18 What Should We Make of the Data Mining Signals?
- No imbalance in ALS from placebo-controlled
statin trials - No dramatic increase in the incidence of ALS
despite dramatic increase in the use of statins - Could statins unmask or exacerbate muscle
symptoms of ALS? - Could the data mining signals be the result of
reporting bias?
19Reporting Biases
- A major concern with all spontaneous reporting
databases - Both statins and ALS associated with muscle
symptoms - Detected a data mining signal for ALS with
fenofibrate, another lipid-altering drug
associated with myopathy - Detected data mining signals for dermatomyositis
and polymyositis with statins
20Next Steps
- Ongoing case-control study
- Kaiser Permanente Northern California
- Lorene Nelson, PhD, Stanford University School of
Medicine is the Principal Investigator - Questions addressed
- Does the use of cholesterol-lowering drugs
increase the risk of developing ALS? - Is the use of cholesterol-lowering drugs
associated with the length of survival after
diagnosis among subjects with ALS? - Is there a relationship between cholesterol
levels prior to disease onset and the risk of
developing ALS, independent of the use of
cholesterol lowering agents? - Study should be completed in mid-to-late 2008
21Colleagues
- Ana Szarfman, MD, PhD
- Andy Mosholder, MD, MPH
- Devanand Jillapalli, MD
- Jay Levine, PhD
- Jo Wyeth, PharmD
- Mark Avigan, MD, CM
- Joe Tonning, MD, MPH
- Rita Ouellet-Hellstrom, PhD, MPH
- Allen Brinker, MD, MPH