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Special cardiac safety concerns Shari L. Targum, MD, MPH, FACC Medical Officer U.S. Food and Drug Administration Detecting cardiac safety signals – Common, drug-related: can detect in placebo-controlled, clinical trials, compare to background rate – Rare, severe, drug-related: sometimes detected in clinical trials (e.g., Stevens-Johnson) or via • risk biomarkers (e.g., QT prolongation) or • epidemiologic studies (e.g., case-control) – Spontaneous events ↑ rate with drug: single event usually not interpretable; detect via • large enough controlled trial • compare to background rate • epidemiologic study (large hazard ratio) 2 QT prolongation and risk of arrhythmia 3 4 QT interval • Variable-- heart rate, autonomic tone, time of day • Can be prolonged due to: – heart disease (e.g., congestive heart failure) – electrolyte abnormalities (e.g., hypokalemia) – drugs (e.g., quinidine). 5 Torsade de pointes (TdP) Rare, but life-threatening. Might not be detected in a drug development program. 6 Background – Drug withdrawals due to QT risk for nonantiarrhythmic drugs (e.g., cisapride, terfenadine) – How to evaluate TdP risk in drug development (e.g., prior to marketing)? 7 QT as a safety biomarker: • Era of the “Thorough QT” (TQT) study • Threshold for potential clinical importance set very low (10 msec) • “Negative study” → routine phase 3 monitoring • Failure to rule out 10 msec → heightened phase 3 monitoring 8 QT Study Characteristics • Characterize QT effects of the drug under near “worst case” scenario – Exposure at supratherapeutic concentrations – ECG sampling at peak concentrations (drug/metabolites) – Sufficient duration of dosing/sampling to characterize effects 9 Some concerns about QT studies • TQT studies difficult and expensive • QTc relationship to risk (arrhythmia) not constant • Unknown public health consequences of compounds removed from pharmaceutical pipeline • Interest in alternative approaches to assess proarrhythmic risk. 10 SCIPA (Comprehensive In Vitro Proarrhythmia Assay) Initiative 1. in vitro drug effects, multiple cardiac channels + in silico reconstruction of electrical effects; 2. confirmation using human stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes. Undergoing validation at this time. 11 Drug-induced Valvulopathy 12 Weight loss and “Fen-phen”… 13 Appetite suppressants • Fenfluramine (1973): approved for short-term use – racemic mixture*- increased serotonin, associated with depression • Dexfenfluramine (1996)* thought to be “safer” • Fen-Phen: never approved, widely used offlabel for long-term management *withdrawn in 1997 14 Case-control study in Europe: odds ratio 23.1 associated with use > 3 months. 24 women, no prior heart disease, mean treatment duration 11 months. Fenfluramine and dexfenfluramine voluntarily withdrawn on Sept. 15, 1997 Source: Bhattacharyya et. al. Lancet 2009; 374: 577-85 Diabetes drugs and cardiovascular risk 18 Cardiovascular risk and diabetes drugs • Diabetes drugs approved based on glycemic control (hemoglobin A1c) • Diabetics have increased cardiovascular risk • Concerns that some medications increase cardiovascular risk (and little information) • Need to show that treatment doesn’t result in unacceptable risk (e.g., non-inferiority) 19 Cardiovascular (CV) risk and diabetes drugs • Guidance evaluating cardiovascular risk in new antidiabetic therapies to treat type 2 diabetes (2008) – Design Phase 2/3 trials to allow meta-analysis – Blinded CV endpoint adjudication committee – Include higher risk patients (e.g., elderly, renal impairment) – Prespecified upper bound • May need adequately powered cardiovascular outcome study. 20 Defining acceptable cardiac risk and diabetes drugs Acceptable and unacceptable cardiovascular risk awith a reassuring point estimate Upper bound of 95% confidence interval for risk ratio or hazard ratio Conclusion >1.8 Inadequate to support approval >1.3 but <1.8a Postmarketing cardiovascular trial(s) needed to show definitively <1.3 <1.3a Postmarketing cardiovascular trial(s) generally not necessary 21 Detecting cardiac safety signals – Common, drug-related: detect in placebocontrolled, clinical trials of appropriate duration – Rare, severe, drug-related: detect via • risk biomarkers (e.g., QT prolongation) • epidemiologic studies (e.g., valvulopathy) – Spontaneous events ↑ rate with drug: single event usually not interpretable; detect via • large enough controlled trial • Meta-analysis (e.g., diabetes drugs) Cardiac Safety-related Groups 23 Cardio-Oncology • Several oncology drugs associated with cardiac toxicity (e.g., anthracyclines, trastuzumab, tyrosine kinase inhibitors) • Interest in assessing and mitigating drug/radiation-induced cardiovascular risk • New interest group (American College of Cardiology), journal (Cardio-Oncology),recent FDA public workshop (22 September 2016) 24 Cardiac Safety Research Consortium • Launched in 2006 through an FDA Critical Path Initiative Memorandum of Understanding with Duke University to support research into the evaluation of cardiac safety of medical products. • Industry-academia-government effort • Think tanks, research projects, publications • Further information: cardiac-safety.org 25