• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Bayer Trasylol trial halted, FDA advises doctors

WASHINGTON
Thu Oct 25, 2007 1:06pm EDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A trial of Bayer AG's BAYG.DE heart surgery drug Trasylol was halted after an increased risk of death from bleeding was linked to the treatment, the company said on Thursday.

Stocks  |  Regulatory News

The drug, approved in 1993 and known generically as aprotinin, has been under a cloud for more than a year amid data suggesting it may boost the risk of death, serious kidney damage and stroke.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration advised doctors in a notice posted on its Web site on Thursday to be aware of the "accumulating data suggesting" an increased mortality risk.

The FDA said it will revisit the drug's safety, which may include label changes or other regulatory actions.

Trasylol is aimed at preventing blood loss in patients with an increased risk for blood loss during heart bypass surgery.

Bayer said it still backs the safety of the drug, and that it is cooperating with the FDA and other health regulators to "reevaluate" its risks and benefits.

The FDA said in its notice to doctors that the 30-day mortality risk in the Trasylol group in the trial was nearing statistical significance, compared with other treatments it was tested against. The drug was linked to less serious bleeding but more deaths due to hemorrhage in an initial analysis.

An FDA advisory panel last month recommended the drug stay on the market despite its risks but urged the company to conduct a randomly-controlled clinical trial, a rigorous study that is considered the gold standard for evaluating a drug.

The drug's labeling was revised last year to narrow its use to patients with an increased risk of blood loss and transfusion, a warning that has substantially cut its use.

Bayer has previously said it mistakenly withheld a study of 67,000 hospital records suggesting Trasylol may boost the risk of death, serious kidney damage, congestive heart failure and stroke.



More from Reuters

Photo

Jobless claims up, but leading indicators improve

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The number of U.S. workers filing new applications for jobless insurance unexpectedly rose last week, but a gauge of future economic activity increased for the eighth month in a row, pointing to a slow economic recovery where employment looms as the dominant concern.

A girl sits on her father's shoulders in front of a globe with an interactive display during an Earth Hour ceremony at the townhall square in central Copenhagen December 16, 2009. Credit: REUTERS/Christian Charisius

U.N. talks at "critical juncture"

Climate talks were given a second chance after the U.S. backed a $100 billion global fund to support poor countries. What else will it take to hammer out a deal?  Full Article 

Bernd Debusmann

Burning borrowed money

The Pentagon burns through $5 million in borrowed money every hour in Afghanistan and the amount is expected to more than double once additional troops are deployed.   Commentary