What still is not clear to drug regulators and medical researchers about the drug safety issue of lower limb amputations linked to Invokana and Invokamet use is the so-called “mechanism of injury”. Put otherwise, they are still searching for an explanation as to how and why there is an increased risk of lower limb amputations for patients using Invokana. Further, it remains uncertain whether this serious side effect may be associated with Farxiga, Jardiance, and other diabetes drugs known as Sodium-Glucose Co-Transporter-2 (SGLT2) Inhibitors.
These precise concerns were addressed in a recent Commentary piece, “CANVAS: Straight Talk Needed on Amputation Risk”, by Harpreet S. Bajaj, MD, MPH, which was published on the Medscape website:
Since the US Food and Drug Administration announced its black-box warning earlier this year for [Invokana (canagliflozin)], many of us have been concerned about the amputation risk observed with this drug in the CANVAS trial (hazard ratio [HR], 1.97 compared with placebo). Despite the overall positive cardiovascular, heart failure, and kidney disease-related benefits seen with canagliflozin, a key clinical concern among prescribing clinicians such as me relates to predictive factors for amputations, and whether this risk correlates with the other treatment-related adverse effects observed (eg, volume depletion and hemoconcentration).
I expected further data clarifications surrounding this issue at the 1-hour CANVAS session at the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD) 2017 meeting, held in September in Lisbon. But I was disappointed; no new data related to amputations from the CANVAS program were shared.
That October 2017 Medscape article closes with a good idea about how to approach this drug safety issue going forward:
Moreover, to clarify whether the amputation harm could be a class effect of SGLT2 inhibitors, a thorough collection of prospective data on amputations and other foot-related complications should be required of all ongoing and future long-term trials within the class (eg, DAPA-CKD, DAPA-HF, and DECLARE with [Farxiga (dapagliflozin)]; EMPEROR-Preserved and EMPEROR-Reduced with [Jardiance (empagliflozin)]; and VERTIS CV with ertugliflozin [a SGLT2 inhibitor which has not been approved by the FDA, yet]).
Of course, we will continue to monitor the medical literature to learn more about how and why there is an increased risk of amputations involving toes, feet, and legs in patients using Invokana or Invokamet– and perhaps Farxiga, Jardiance, and other SGLT2 inhibitors used as diabetes drugs.
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The post Invokana – Amputations: No Explanation Yet As Regards “How” And “Why” appeared first on Drug Injury Law.