User login
PHILADELPHIA – according to a senior officer of the National Kidney Foundation.
“I’ve been telling everyone not to stop on their own,” said Joseph A. Vassalotti, MD, chief medical officer for the National Kidney Foundation and associate clinical professor of medicine at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York.
“The risk of cardiovascular events acutely and the long-term risk of kidney disease progression is much more concerning to me, if they self-discontinue the ARB, than the small risk of cancer,” Dr. Vassalotti said in a meet-the-professor session at the annual meeting of the American College of Physicians.
Put in perspective, the absolute risk of cancer according to the Food and Drug Administration is one new malignancy per 8,000 patients treated with 320 mg of valsartan daily – the highest ARB dose that contained N-Nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA), one of several impurities that led to the recent recalls.
Dr. Vassalotti said that so far, he’s been able to avoid switching patients from one ARB to another by working with pharmacies to get the same medication in a different generic brand not affected by the FDA recalls.
He advised caution in switching ARBs, noting a paucity of head-to-head comparative data between ARBs.
“There may be variable effects,” he said.
If switching is thought to be warranted, he said, some extra tests or visits might be needed to ensure avoidance of hyperkalemia, undertreated hypertension, or hypotension.
Dr. Vassalotti encouraged attendees to review a perspective piece in the New England Journal of Medicine (2019 Mar 13. doi: 10.1056/NEJMp1901657) describing this hypertension “hot potato” resulting from the large-scale voluntary recalls of products containing valsartan, losartan, and irbesartan due to nitrosamine contamination.
Patients may hear about recalls of hypertension drugs, but may not know what products or manufacturers are involved, leaving the burden on clinicians, pharmacies, and health care systems to respond to their concerns, said authors of that perspective piece, led by J. Brian Byrd, MD, of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
“Recalls may trigger unnecessary concern among many people receiving antihypertensive therapy – and may be ignored by people who take ARBs for heart failure or chronic kidney disease,” wrote Dr. Byrd and his colleagues.
The FDA, which said it has worked with manufacturers to “swiftly” remove ARB drug products with impurity levels above acceptable limits, is now maintaining a list of other currently marketed ARB products that are being tested for impurities.
As of the latest update on April 4, the FDA listed more than 40 products with an overall nitrosamine impurity determination of “not present” and more than 300 additional products for which assessments are not yet complete.
“Essentially, we have a safe list now of ARBs that is being developed,” Dr. Vassalotti said. “So if a patient really wanted to change, I would consult that list, and consider picking one that’s been tested already on that list, and the FDA hopefully will complete testing on all the ARB drugs in the near future.”
Dr. Vassalotti is a consultant with Merck, Janssen, and the U.S. Nephrology Advisory Board.
PHILADELPHIA – according to a senior officer of the National Kidney Foundation.
“I’ve been telling everyone not to stop on their own,” said Joseph A. Vassalotti, MD, chief medical officer for the National Kidney Foundation and associate clinical professor of medicine at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York.
“The risk of cardiovascular events acutely and the long-term risk of kidney disease progression is much more concerning to me, if they self-discontinue the ARB, than the small risk of cancer,” Dr. Vassalotti said in a meet-the-professor session at the annual meeting of the American College of Physicians.
Put in perspective, the absolute risk of cancer according to the Food and Drug Administration is one new malignancy per 8,000 patients treated with 320 mg of valsartan daily – the highest ARB dose that contained N-Nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA), one of several impurities that led to the recent recalls.
Dr. Vassalotti said that so far, he’s been able to avoid switching patients from one ARB to another by working with pharmacies to get the same medication in a different generic brand not affected by the FDA recalls.
He advised caution in switching ARBs, noting a paucity of head-to-head comparative data between ARBs.
“There may be variable effects,” he said.
If switching is thought to be warranted, he said, some extra tests or visits might be needed to ensure avoidance of hyperkalemia, undertreated hypertension, or hypotension.
Dr. Vassalotti encouraged attendees to review a perspective piece in the New England Journal of Medicine (2019 Mar 13. doi: 10.1056/NEJMp1901657) describing this hypertension “hot potato” resulting from the large-scale voluntary recalls of products containing valsartan, losartan, and irbesartan due to nitrosamine contamination.
Patients may hear about recalls of hypertension drugs, but may not know what products or manufacturers are involved, leaving the burden on clinicians, pharmacies, and health care systems to respond to their concerns, said authors of that perspective piece, led by J. Brian Byrd, MD, of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
“Recalls may trigger unnecessary concern among many people receiving antihypertensive therapy – and may be ignored by people who take ARBs for heart failure or chronic kidney disease,” wrote Dr. Byrd and his colleagues.
The FDA, which said it has worked with manufacturers to “swiftly” remove ARB drug products with impurity levels above acceptable limits, is now maintaining a list of other currently marketed ARB products that are being tested for impurities.
As of the latest update on April 4, the FDA listed more than 40 products with an overall nitrosamine impurity determination of “not present” and more than 300 additional products for which assessments are not yet complete.
“Essentially, we have a safe list now of ARBs that is being developed,” Dr. Vassalotti said. “So if a patient really wanted to change, I would consult that list, and consider picking one that’s been tested already on that list, and the FDA hopefully will complete testing on all the ARB drugs in the near future.”
Dr. Vassalotti is a consultant with Merck, Janssen, and the U.S. Nephrology Advisory Board.
PHILADELPHIA – according to a senior officer of the National Kidney Foundation.
“I’ve been telling everyone not to stop on their own,” said Joseph A. Vassalotti, MD, chief medical officer for the National Kidney Foundation and associate clinical professor of medicine at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York.
“The risk of cardiovascular events acutely and the long-term risk of kidney disease progression is much more concerning to me, if they self-discontinue the ARB, than the small risk of cancer,” Dr. Vassalotti said in a meet-the-professor session at the annual meeting of the American College of Physicians.
Put in perspective, the absolute risk of cancer according to the Food and Drug Administration is one new malignancy per 8,000 patients treated with 320 mg of valsartan daily – the highest ARB dose that contained N-Nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA), one of several impurities that led to the recent recalls.
Dr. Vassalotti said that so far, he’s been able to avoid switching patients from one ARB to another by working with pharmacies to get the same medication in a different generic brand not affected by the FDA recalls.
He advised caution in switching ARBs, noting a paucity of head-to-head comparative data between ARBs.
“There may be variable effects,” he said.
If switching is thought to be warranted, he said, some extra tests or visits might be needed to ensure avoidance of hyperkalemia, undertreated hypertension, or hypotension.
Dr. Vassalotti encouraged attendees to review a perspective piece in the New England Journal of Medicine (2019 Mar 13. doi: 10.1056/NEJMp1901657) describing this hypertension “hot potato” resulting from the large-scale voluntary recalls of products containing valsartan, losartan, and irbesartan due to nitrosamine contamination.
Patients may hear about recalls of hypertension drugs, but may not know what products or manufacturers are involved, leaving the burden on clinicians, pharmacies, and health care systems to respond to their concerns, said authors of that perspective piece, led by J. Brian Byrd, MD, of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
“Recalls may trigger unnecessary concern among many people receiving antihypertensive therapy – and may be ignored by people who take ARBs for heart failure or chronic kidney disease,” wrote Dr. Byrd and his colleagues.
The FDA, which said it has worked with manufacturers to “swiftly” remove ARB drug products with impurity levels above acceptable limits, is now maintaining a list of other currently marketed ARB products that are being tested for impurities.
As of the latest update on April 4, the FDA listed more than 40 products with an overall nitrosamine impurity determination of “not present” and more than 300 additional products for which assessments are not yet complete.
“Essentially, we have a safe list now of ARBs that is being developed,” Dr. Vassalotti said. “So if a patient really wanted to change, I would consult that list, and consider picking one that’s been tested already on that list, and the FDA hopefully will complete testing on all the ARB drugs in the near future.”
Dr. Vassalotti is a consultant with Merck, Janssen, and the U.S. Nephrology Advisory Board.
FROM INTERNAL MEDICINE 2019