Title: Review of post-marketing safety of Factive (gemifloxacin)
1Review of post-marketing safety of Factive
(gemifloxacin)
Andrew Mosholder, M.D., M.P.H. Medical Officer
Division of Drug Risk Evaluation Office of
Surveillance and Epidemiology, FDA
2Outline
- Extent of use of gemifloxacin
- Overview of AERS data for gemifloxacin
- Non-skin adverse event reporting data
- Skin adverse events
- Special review of serious skin reports
- Conclusions
3Extent of Use of Gemifloxacin
- Approved in 2003, launched in 2004
- Large number of drug samples given to patients
makes estimations difficult - Oscients estimate of exposure
- U.S. 760,000 patients
- Outside U.S. 205,000 patients
- Verispan LLC Vector One
- Total Patient Tracker estimates approximately
- 332,114 pts filled prescriptions
- Physician Drug and Diagnosis Audit estimates
- approximately 1.2 million uses
- Drug samples given to patients may account for
some of discrepancy
Verispan Total Patient Tracker, Year 2002 -
June 2006 Aggregate Time, Extracted 8-23-06
Verispan, Physician Drug and Diagnosis Audit
(PDDA), Years 2004 - June 2006, Extracted 8-23-06
4Postmarketing Data from AERS
- Voluntary, spontaneous reports collected through
MedWatch system - Useful for detecting rare but significant adverse
drug reactions in the population post-marketing - Subject to usual limitations of spontaneous
reporting systems - Under-reporting (see next slide)
- Biases in reporting
- Variable quality of information in reports
- Spontaneous reports entered in FDAs Adverse
Event Reporting System (AERS) database - On the MedWatch form, serious cases are those
designated by the reporter as fatal,
life-threatening, involving hospitalization,
causing disability, involving a congenital
anomaly, requiring intervention to prevent
permanent impairment, or other (fill in blank)
5Under-reporting of severe cutaneous reactions
- In Canada over a five year period, 250 cases of
toxic epidermal necrolysis were admitted to
hospital burn units, but only 25 of these were
reported to the Canadian postmarketing
surveillance system - Mittman et al. Drug Saf 200427477-87
6Overview of AERS reports for gemifloxacin (Aug
2006)
- Total of reports 960
- of serious reports 84 (8.5)
-
- Origin 957 US, 3 non-US
- Gender distribution 589 F, 257 M
- Age distribution 207 40, 319gt40
- Leading System Organ Class
- Skin and Subcutaneous Tissue Disorders
(n783, 82 of total)
7(No Transcript)
8Gemifloxacin AERS data
- Non-cutaneous reports
- Selected events
- (As of August 2006)
9Summary of non- skin reportsAugust 2006
- Approximately 20 (184) of all AERS reports were
not a cutaneous reaction - 43 with serious outcome
- Majority of the serious reports were in adult
patients
10Summary of non- skin reports with Serious Outcome
(n43)
- Indication for (n28)
- bronchitis 9, sinusitis 9, pneumonia 7
- Most frequently reported serious AEs
- Allergic phenomena (anaphylaxis, allergic
reactions) - Total 16 serious allergic event reports
including both cutaneous and non-cutaneous - Clostridium difficile infection, 7
- Bleeding/increased INR with warfarin, 6
11Reports with fatal outcomesAugust 2006
- 74 yo m died with C. difficile colitis, toxic
megacolon and sepsis, one week after completing
gemifloxacin treatment for bronchitis - 47 yo m died after one dose pt had renal failure
and was candidate for dialysis no autopsy - 33 yo m died from hemophagocytic syndrome of
unknown etiology (also had mild rash) - 44 yo m with dilated cardiomyopathy hx seizures
- 66 yo f with hives, photosensitivity died months
later during a surgical procedure - Of the above, the death from C. difficile colitis
can be reasonably attributed to gemifloxacin
treatment
12Events of Interest
- Cardiac events 6
- Hepatic events 12
- Clostridium colitis 10
- Drug ineffective 31
- Drug Interactions 10
- Thrombocytopenia 3
13Cardiac Events (n6)
- QT prolongation N1
- 46 yo F, hosp. with respiratory failure,
hypokalemic - Tachycardia N5
- One supraventricular tachycardia
- no ventricular tachycardia
14Hepatic events (n12)
- Liver failure/hemophagocytic syndrome N1
- Cholestasis/Liver necrosis N1
- Hepatic steatosis N1
- Acute cholecystitis N1
- Elevation of liver enzymes N8
- Confounded by other drugs, prior history or
disease
15Clostridium colitis (n10)
- Clostridium colitis infection was reported in 10
patients - 6/10 were females
- 40 had a positive culture or toxin, or had the
diagnosis confirmed by biopsy - One patient died of megacolon and sepsis
16Drug Interactions (n10)
-
- 7 out of 10 gemifloxacin warfarin
- Increased PT or INR
- Some with bleeding
-
17Gemifloxacin AERS data
- Cutaneous manifestations reports
18Background
- Strong signal for rash in clinical trials data
- Rash in 32 of patients treated in special study
344 (enriched for susceptibility to rash) - Rashes designated serious by investigator in 1
in 1200 patients treated in clinical trials - Purpose of postmarketing data review to expand
upon the clinical picture of gemifloxacin
cutaneous toxicity observed in clinical trials
19Initial AERS Skin Events Review AERS Data
cutoff May 31, 2006
- N799 total reports
- Crude count, may include duplicates
- 83 of all AERS reports listed a skin adverse
event - 73 of skin events were in females
- 6 of skin events listed a serious outcome
20Age and Gender
- Females where age/gender stated (n247), 42 of
skin event reports from 40 years age group.
Approximate drug use (prescriptions) for this age
group accounted for 21. - Males (n93), 45 of skin events were reported
from 40 years age group. Approximate drug use
(prescriptions) for this age group accounted for
23.
Verispan Vector One National, 2002-2006, data
extracted July-2006
21Time to onset of Rash
- Subset review of n291 cases coded with the
MedDRA term Rash - Median time to onset (when data provided) 4 d
-
22Serious Outcome Cases
- Death cases already discussed
- Hospitalized cases required treatments including
steroids, antihistamines, oxygen, and intravenous
fluids - Medically important cases with hypersensitivity
component urticaria, swelling of face,
allergic vasculitis etc. needed intervention
with epinephrine, steroids and antihistamines - Some with previous FQ use, history of drug allergy
23Crude US AERS Reporting rates for serious skin
event cases (5/2006)
Product (Approval) Moxifloxacin (1999) Gatifloxacin (1999) Gemifloxacin (2003) Cefditoren (2001) Telithromycin (2004)
Estimated Rx (in 1000s) 5386 8237 363 360 5340
of AERS serious cutaneous reports 226 141 38 5 109
Reporting rates Per million RX 42 17 105 14 20
Verispan Vector One National, 1996-2006,
data extracted July-2006 First two and a half
years for telithromycin and gemifloxacin first
three years for moxifloxacin and gatifloxacin
and first 4 years for cefditoren (only 1,000
prescriptions were dispensed in 2001)
24Addendum Review
- Data cutoff August 2, 2006
25Addendum Review
- Individual review and analysis of U.S. AERS skin
disorder reports with serious outcomes (8-2-06) - Special attention to cases that might represent
known severe drug reactions - Stevens-Johnson syndrome (SJS)
- Toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN)
- Allergic/hypersensitivity reactions
- Exclusions
- Cases designated serious by reporter but which
did not seem to warrant that classification on
review (e.g., severe rash) - Cases in which the only skin events were not
relevant to assessment of cutaneous drug
reactions (e.g., petechiae) -
- Drugs
- Gemifloxacin
- Cefditoren
26Individual review of serious skin events Results
Drug 2002-6/2006 TPT total patients PDDA uses 2002-6/2006 Numbers of U.S. AERS reports per manual review Numbers of U.S. AERS reports per manual review Numbers of U.S. AERS reports per manual review Numbers of U.S. AERS reports per manual review Numbers of U.S. AERS reports per manual review
Drug 2002-6/2006 TPT total patients PDDA uses 2002-6/2006 Definite SJS Possible SJS Serious allergic skin Other serious skin All serious skin
Gemifloxacin 332,114 1,183,000 0 3 9 12 24
Cefditoren 512,156 1,412,000 0 0 3 0 3
Verispan Total Patient Tracker, Year 2002 -
June 2006 Aggregate Time, Extracted 8-23-06
Verispan, Physician Drug and Diagnosis Audit
(PDDA), Years 2004 - June 2006, Extracted 8-23-06
27Selected case descriptions
- 37 yo M completed 5 d treatment for
sinusitis/bronchitis. On day 6 morbilliform
rash, sore throat, periorbital swelling, fever
hospitalized and received antihistamine therapy.
Dx dermatitis medicamentosus - 40 yo M after one dose for sinusitis anaphylaxis
with difficulty breathing, rash, facial and oral
swelling, cough, dyspnea, hives, light headed
treated in ER with epinephrine, antihistamines,
prednisone - 44 yo M completed 5 d treatment for sinusitis
day 6 dyspnea, trouble swallowing, confusion,
progressive macular rash hospitalized and
treated with IV steroid and antihistamine - 20s F, one day after completing 5 day treatment
for unspecified respiratory tract infection, was
hospitalized for rash. Treatment and outcome ?.
28U.S. AERS reports of seriouscutaneous events per million PDDA occurrences, by drug (as of 8/2/06) U.S. AERS reports of seriouscutaneous events per million PDDA occurrences, by drug (as of 8/2/06) U.S. AERS reports of seriouscutaneous events per million PDDA occurrences, by drug (as of 8/2/06) U.S. AERS reports of seriouscutaneous events per million PDDA occurrences, by drug (as of 8/2/06) U.S. AERS reports of seriouscutaneous events per million PDDA occurrences, by drug (as of 8/2/06)
Drug Possible SJS Serious allergic rash Other serious skin All serious skin
Gemifloxacin 2.5 3.4 5.1 11.0
Cefditoren 0 2.1 0 2.1
29Addendum review of AERS serious skin reports
Comments
- In the postmarketing environment, as in the
clinical trials, gemifloxacin is associated with
serious skin adverse events - Serious allergic responses with cutaneous
manifestations - Rashes requiring hospital treatment (even without
meeting criteria for SJS or TEN) - Possible SJS cases?
- Many reports lacked critical clinical information
that might have permitted more definitive
classification
30Addendum review of AERS serious skin reports
Comments, cont.
- Serious skin events in the U.S. were reported at
a higher rate for gemifloxacin than for the
comparator drug cefditoren, in both the initial
crude reporting rate analysis and the analysis
following individual case review - Such comparisons must be made very cautiously
because of uncertainties in both the numerator
and denominator
31Review of Postmarketing Data for Gemifloxacin
Conclusions
- Cefditoren has been marketed in Japan since 1994
and has been associated with SJS and TEN in
foreign postmarketing data - Slightly more U.S. patients have used cefditoren
compared to gemifloxacin - Thus, absence of U.S. reports of definite SJS/TEN
with gemifloxacin provides only limited
reassurance, given similar absence of U.S.
reports for cefditoren to date
32Review of Postmarketing Data for Gemifloxacin
Conclusions
- 1 mil or fewer patients exposed to gemifloxacin
to date - Because of short duration of exposure with a
typical course of treatment, even a single case
of SJS would be more than expected
33Conclusions
- Important adverse events associated with
gemifloxacin in the postmarketing environment
thus far include - Serious allergic reactions
- Clostridium colitis
- Rashes which require hospitalization
- Others
- SJS?
- Increased INR with coumadin?
- Thrombocytopenia?
34Conclusions continued
- Post-marketing data do not give us assurance that
our concerns regarding cutaneous toxicity should
be any less when larger patient populations are
exposed. - The magnitude of the benefit gained from the use
of gemifloxacin for the indication under
discussion (Acute Bacterial Sinusitis) needs to
be clearly defined to weigh against the magnitude
of this risk associated with gemifloxacin.
35Acknowledgements
- Evelyn R. Farinas, R.Ph., M.G.A.
- Melissa Truffa, R.Ph.
- Syed Rizwanuddin Ahmad, M.D., M.P.H.
- Allen Brinker, M.D., M.S.
- Lois La Grenade, M.D., M.P.H.
- Brenda Marques, Pharm.D.
- Laura A. Governale, Pharm.D., MBA
- Vicky Borders-Hemphill, Pharm.D.
- Carol Pamer, R.Ph.
- Rosemary Johann-Liang, M.D.