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FDA’s Dapagliflozin Review to Focus on Hepatic Effects, Cancer Risks


 

FROM THE FDA

Dapagliflozin seems to have skirted the cardiovascular safety concerns surrounding other agents intended for treating type 2 diabetes, but the Food and Drug Administration is nevertheless seeking advisory committee input on a handful of “unexpected” safety issues for the first-in-class sodium glucose cotransporter–2 inhibitor, including potential hepatic and cancer risks.

At a July 19 meeting, the agency will ask its Endocrinologic and Metabolic Drugs Advisory Committee whether sufficient evaluation has been conducted preapproval to determine if dapagliflozin is associated with a risk of hepatotoxicity, according to agency briefing documents released July 15.

The FDA also seeks panel discussion on numeric imbalances in cases of breast and bladder cancer observed in the clinical program, and it asks the committee to weigh the clinical significance of other safety findings, including the increased risk of genitourinary infections.

The agency has little quibble with dapagliflozin’s efficacy, other than to say it is limited to patients with normal renal function or only mild impairment. However, the FDA asks whether additional studies in special populations should be conducted to better characterize efficacy or whether renal function monitoring should be performed before and during treatment.

Novel Mechanism of Action

Dapagliflozin is the most advanced member of the new class of oral sodium glucose cotransporter–2 (SGLT2) inhibitors that cause renal elimination of glucose. The mechanism of action, which offers a way to lower blood glucose apart from insulin, has spurred predictions that the class would find its niche as add-on therapy at different stages of the disease.

Bristol-Myers Squibb and AstraZeneca are seeking a broad indication for dapagliflozin: as an adjunct to diet and exercise to improve glycemic control in adults with type 2 diabetes.

The new drug application submission included data from three phase IIb and 11 phase III studies evaluating dapagliflozin as monotherapy, add-on therapy to metformin, sulfonylureas, pioglitazone (Actos), or insulin, as well as initial combination therapy with metformin. Efficacy results were comparable to those for existing agents, the FDA says.

“The magnitude of glycemic reduction in the clinical trials has been consistent and in line with recently approved antidiabetic drugs, such as dipeptidyl peptidase inhibitors,” the division of metabolism and endocrinology products says in its clinical briefing document. “In active-controlled trials, dapagliflozin demonstrated equivalent effects on HbA1c as near maximally effective doses of metformin and glipizide at 1 year.”

However, the agency found efficacy to be limited in those patients with compromised renal function. The sponsors have proposed that the drug not be used in patients with moderate renal impairment, with a glomerular filtration rate (GFR) less than 45 mL/min per 1.73 m2. But the agency cited a loss of statistically significant efficacy in patients with more mild impairment, with a GFR less than 45-59 mL/min per 1.73 m2.

The loss of efficacy that accompanies an increase in renal impairment is particularly important for type 2 diabetics, FDA reviewers say.

“It is important to note that patients with [type 2 diabetes mellitus] are at risk for worsening renal function over the course of their disease. Unlike treatment with other classes of antidiabetic medications that rely on either insulin secretion or sensitivity, dapagliflozin’s effect is dependent on GFR and independent of beta-cell function. Therefore, secondary failure of glycemic control with dapagliflozin may represent deterioration of renal function, rather than beta-cell function, and discontinuation of dapagliflozin (in contrast to the practice of adding drugs of complementary effects) may be recommended.”

Cardiovascular Profile Looks Good

Concerns about the postmarketing cardiovascular (CV) safety of another diabetes drug, GlaxoSmithKline’s Avandia (rosiglitazone), spurred new FDA guidelines in December 2008 requiring sponsors to rule out an unacceptable level of increased cardiovascular risk before and after approval for type 2 treatments.

Sponsors must rule out an 80% increased risk of major adverse CV events preapproval. If preapproval clinical data show that the upper bound of the two-sided 95% confidence interval for the estimated risk lies between 1.3 and 1.8, companies generally will need to conduct a postmarketing trial to demonstrate that the upper bound is less than 1.3. If the preapproval data demonstrate an upper bound below 1.3, a postmarketing cardiovascular trial generally may not be necessary.

The guidance’s provisions applied to all drugs pending FDA review and in clinical development at the time it was issued. The new CV requirements tripped up at least one antidiabetic agent that had already been submitted for FDA review, Takeda’s DPP-4 inhibitor alogliptin.

However, it appears that dapagliflozin has easily overcome the preapproval CV hurdle laid out in the guidance.

Based on a meta-analysis of the phase II/III trials, the drug “does not appear to be associated with excess CV risk with an overall HR of 0.67 … relative to comparators for the primary composite of CV deaths, myocardial infarctions, stroke, and hospitalization for unstable angina,” Dr. Mary Parks, director of the division of metabolism and endocrinology products, writes in her memo to the advisory committee.

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