| January 17, 2005
Penn Researchers Add More Evidence
to Demonstrate Role of COX Inhibitors in Heart-Disease
Risk
(Philadelphia, PA) – In two articles, published
in Circulation, researchers from the University
of Pennsylvania School of Medicine provide
further evidence for the role of cyclooxygenases (COX)
in heart-disease risk. In one, a statistical meta-analysis
of two placebo-controlled trials, the COX-2 inhibitor
Bextra elevated the combined incidence of heart attack
and stroke three-fold in coronary artery bypass graft
(CABG) surgery patients. In the second, the investigators
found that a fat produced by COX-1 speeds hardening
of the arteries in a mouse model of atherosclerosis,
which may have implications for low-dose aspirin therapy
in heart patients.
Six years ago Garret FitzGerald, MD,
Director of the Institute for Translational
Medicine and Therapeutics at Penn, raised the
possibility that selective COX-2 inhibitors might predispose
patients otherwise at risk for an increased incidence
of heart attack and stroke. This proposal was based
initially on his studies of how celecoxib (Celebrex)
and rofeocoxib (Vioxx) worked in human volunteers.
The first unequivocal evidence of this risk emerged
with the Merck-sponsored APPROVe study of Vioxx, leading
to withdrawal of the drug in September 2004. Evidence
implicating a second member of the class, valdecoxib
(Bextra) was presented by FitzGerald in a lecture at
the American Heart Association (AHA) in November 2004.
This work – a collaboration led by Curt Furberg
of Wake Forrest University, along with Bruce Psaty of
the University of Washington and FitzGerald –
appears online January 17 in Circulation and
in the January 25th print edition of the journal.
In this first study, the researchers used a conventional
statistical approach called meta-analysis to combine
the findings of two trials to obtain a stronger estimate
of the risk of heart attack plus stroke than is possible
from looking at either trial alone. Their analysis suggests
that the COX-2 inhibitor Bextra elevated the combined
incidence of heart attack and stroke three-fold in the
study population of CABG patients.
Two placebo-controlled trials of Bextra and parecoxib
(Dynastat) were performed in patients undergoing coronary
artery bypass graft surgery. These studies were sponsored
by Pfizer, Inc. In both cases, intravenous Dynastat,
which is converted to Bextra within minutes in the body,
was given before oral dosing with Bextra. The first
involved roughly 400 patients and dosing lasted 14 days.
Concern was prompted by an apparent cardiovascular signal
and the FDA did not grant approval to Dynastat, despite
clear evidence of pain relief from the Dynastat/Bextra
combination compared to placebo. A second, larger study
was performed in which the dose of Bextra was reduced,
as was the dosing period to 10 days. The figures from
this study are now incorporated in a revised drug label
for Bextra available at the FDA website (www.fda.gov).
This result is consistent with the original mechanism
proposed by FitzGerald in 1999 that COX-2 inhibitors
may be problematic for those at risk for heart disease.
COX-2 is the main source of a fat – prostacyclin
or PGI2 – which protects the heart from factors
that activate the clotting system, harden the arteries,
and raise blood pressure. “Although a clinical
trial is a crude detection system for uncommon side
effects, such as the cardiovascular risk from coxibs,
we predicted that a signal would be detected faster
and in smaller studies in patients with activated clotting
systems,” says FitzGerald. “It is well known
that this is true of coronary artery bypass graft surgery
patients.” Studies of sufficient size and duration
to detect the expected rates of cardiovascular events
in arthritis patients have not been performed with Bextra.
While FitzGerald stresses that the emergence of a cardiovascular
signal with a second COX-2 inhibitor rendered the argument
for a class effect of the risk “compelling,”
the early cessation of a placebo-controlled trial of
celecoxib (Celebrex) in December 2004 by the National
Cancer Institute (because of an excess incidence of
heart attack and stroke) appeared to put the matter
beyond dispute.
A related paper from the FitzGerald group also appears
online in the same issue of Circulation. Karine
Egan, PhD, a postdoctoral researcher in the
FitzGerald lab, and colleagues at Penn and the Wistar
Institute studied mice genetically prone to hardening
of the arteries (atherosclerosis) and showed that another
fat – thromboxane or TxA2, this time produced
by COX-1 – accelerates atherosclerosis. Indeed,
they showed a drug that blocks TxA2 slowed this process
at its early stages, although it seemed ineffective
once atherosclerosis was well established. “This
is of particular interest, as low-dose aspirin prevents
heart attack and stroke by blocking COX-1 formation
of TxA2 in blood cells called platelets,” says
FitzGerald. “Its effects or those of a TxA2 blocker
on hardening of the arteries has never been studied
well in humans.”
Egan and colleagues failed to detect a benefit from
COX-2 inhibition in the atherosclerosis-prone mice,
but they reasoned that a potential benefit might be
masked by the effect of the drug. Although platelet
COX-1 is the major source of TxA2, this fat can also
be formed by COX-2 in cells called macrophages that
invade the hardening vessel wall. Given what they had
seen with the TxA2 blocker, FitzGerald’s group
figured that they might need to add the TxA2 blocker
to see the anti-inflammatory benefit of the COX-2 inhibitor.
Adding the COX-2 inhibitor not only failed to add to
the beneficial effects of the TxA2 blocker, it caused
disturbing changes in the makeup of the atherosclerotic
plaques. “We were amazed,” states Egan.
“Addition of the COX-2 inhibitor caused changes
that, if they occurred in humans, would result in a
loss of stability of the plaque, making it more likely
to rupture and activate clotting, causing heart attack
or stroke.”
“We must always be cautious projecting the results
of studies in mice to clinical outcomes in humans,”
says FitzGerald. “While low-dose aspirin works
by switching off TxA2, a TxA2 blocker might act in subtle,
but importantly different ways. However, in so far as
it mimics the effects of low-dose aspirin, these results
would have disturbing implications for patients at high
cardiovascular risk treated with aspirin and a coxib.”
FitzGerald adds: “The clear emergence of a cardiovascular
hazard from COX-2 inhibitors in patients, the weak rationale
for a study of their protective properties in the first
instance, and now this evidence from mice would indicate
to me that a trial in high-risk patients, such as that
proposed for Celebrex is, at best, ill advised.”
This paper was funded in part by grants from the National
Institutes of Health, Servier Laboratories, and Merck
Research Laboratories. Servier and Merck had no influence
on the design or interpretation of the studies, and
the authors have no competing financial interests.
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