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A Medco Health Solutions study presented Tuesday at the
American Heart Association meeting in New Orleans reveals that stent patient
taking Sanofi-Aventis/Bristol-Myers Squibb’s blood thinner block buster Plavix or
clopidogrel along with certain heartburn drugs such as AstraZeneca PLC's Nexium
may face a greater risk of heart attack, stroke and other dangerous events than
those who took Plavix alone.
Nexium and other proton pump inhibitors, like Wyeth’s
Protonix and Prevacid, Eisai Co.'s Aciphex, are used to treat heartburn, in
which stomach acids come back up the esophagus, causing pain and inflammation. The
drugs are usually prescribed for patients taking Plavix because the drug has
been associated with a higher risk of ulcers.
Nexium was AstraZeneca’s top-selling product, generating
revenue of $1.32 billion in the third quarter of 2008. Plavix generated $1.44
billion for Bristol-Myers during the same period.
The researchers at Medco, the largest US drug
benefits manager, found that, overall, proton pump inhibitors were associated
with a 50 percent increase in the risk of heart attack, stroke, bypass surgery
and cardiac-related death for Plavix users. People who took anti-clotting drugs
alone had problems a fifth of the time.
“Considering the widespread use of these two medications, this important
research adds to a growing body of evidence raising questions about their
concurrent use and suggests further research is needed,” said Dr. Robert
Epstein, Medco's chief medical officer and the study's lead author.
The study involved 16,690 patients followed for a year who needed a “cardiac
intervention” such as a stent or a balloon and went on to take Plavix. Of
those, 6,828 also took a proton-pump inhibitor. The study found that about 18
percent in the Plavix-alone group had another cardiac event within a year of
the original intervention, while nearly 25 percent of those taking both drugs
had another cardiac event.
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