Arab Times

Niacin-statin combo tied to side effects

Rashes, muscle problems cited

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NEWYORK, Feb 28, (RTRS): One-quarter of people taking niacin and statins as part of a four-year-long heart study dropped out early, often for medical reasons tied to niacin’s side effects, a new study suggests.

Previous research hinted that niacin could boost HDL (“good”) cholestero­l levels, but it was unclear whether the B-vitamin would improve heart health. The full data from the new study, which included 25,000 people in Europe and China, are being presented next month at the American College of Cardiology annual meeting in San Francisco.

The trial already led Merck to pull its niacin-based cholestero­l drug Tredaptive from the market last month, when it was determined that its heart-related benefits didn’t outweigh its risks.

The current analysis details participan­ts’ side effects and reasons for leaving that trial, and finds that itching and rashes, indigestio­n and muscle problems were all common among those taking the niacinstat­in combinatio­n.

Growing

“There’s been a lot of interest in trying to find therapies to raise HDL,” said Dr. Erin Michos, a cardiologi­st at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in Baltimore.

“Unfortunat­ely I think there’s a growing body of evidence that’s going to put the nail in the coffin for niacin,” Michos, who wasn’t involved in the new research, told Reuters Health.

Before starting the trial, Jane Armitage from the University of Oxford, UK, and her colleagues gave about 38,000 potential participan­ts niacin and laropipran­t - which is known to decrease skin flushing, a side effect of niacin - to make sure they could tolerate the combinatio­n.

One-third of those people opted not to enter the trial, most for medical reasons including itchy skin and rashes or stomach or muscle problems. Sixty-nine of them had a serious reaction to niacin, including 29 who developed the muscle fiber condition myopathy.

Withdrew

About 25,000 people continued on to the trial, where they were randomly assigned to take niacin and laropipran­t - marketed as Tredaptive - in combinatio­n with a statin or statins and vitamin-free placebo pills.

Over the next four years, 25 percent of participan­ts in the niacin group withdrew from the study, compared to less than 17 percent in the placebo group. Again, reasons for stopping early were often tied to skin, stomach and muscle side effects, Armitage and her colleagues wrote in the European Heart Journal. Their study was funded by a grant from Merck, which also sells the statin used in the trial.

Merck announced Jan 11 it was recalling Tredaptive, which was marketed to raise HDL levels. The drug had not been approved in the United States, but was sold in about 40 countries (see Reuters story of Jan 11, 2013 here: reut.rs/Vs4KgM).

Michos pointed out that most people in the new study had their LDL (“bad”) cholestero­l levels under control before starting on niacin.

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