Healthy tips, updates, information and news feeds for patients and families of the Dartmouth Medical Center.
Wednesday, April 14, 2010
Prostate Cancer and Avodart
Avodart may help lower prostate cancer risk in men at high risk.
NBC Nightly News (3/31, story 4, 2:20, Bazell) reported, "Drug giant GlaxoSmithKline, which makes Avodart [dutasteride],is asking the FDA to allow sales of the drug for a new use, to reduce cancer risk. The head of" a new "study which was paid for by the company agrees." Dr. Gerald Andriole, Washington University, was shown saying, "It reduces a man's chance of being diagnosed with prostate cancer."
The study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, showed that "men at an above-normal risk of prostate cancer may be able to reduce their risk of developing the disease by taking" the drug, the Los Angeles Times (4/1, Maugh) reports. Researchers found that "the drug dutasteride" lowered "the risk of prostate cancer by about a quarter in high-risk men."
But, the study also showed that "heart failure developed in 30 men on the drug versus only 16 on dummy pills," the AP (4/1, Marchione) reports. Upon further analysis, researchers found "that men who developed heart failure while on Avodart also tended to be taking certain other drugs, said Glaxo spokeswoman Sarah Alspach." Dr. Barnett Kramer, a National Institutes of Health scientist, noted that "the important detail is there's a heart failure signal here that was unanticipated."
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