Cholesterol Pills and Grapefruit Don't
Mix
Taking certain cholesterol-lowering
drugs at the same time as grapefruit juice can increase the risk
of potentially life-threatening muscle toxicity, British regulators
warned.
The Medicines and Healthcare Products
Regulatory Agency said the risk was greatest with Merck & Co Inc's
Zocor, or simvastatin, which recently went on sale without prescription
in Britain, and Pfizer Inc's Lipitor.
The problem occurs because grapefruit
contains a chemical that inactivates a liver enzyme involved in
drug metabolism. As a result, regular consumption of grapefruit
juice can lead to excessively high levels of medicine in the blood.
The risk of serious muscle problems
also increases when these cholesterol pills, or statins, are taken
along with some other drugs, including HIV protease inhibitors,
the agency said in an update to doctors.
The grapefruit hazard is not significant
for other statins, such as Novartis AG's Lescol, Bristol-Myers
Squibb Co's Pravachol and AstraZeneca Plc's Crestor.
But muscle toxicity is still a
recognized adverse reaction with high doses of all statins, leading
in rare cases to rhabdomyolysis -- a condition in which muscle
fibers break down and are released into the circulation, damaging
the kidney.
Worries about rhabdomyolysis have
been a particular issue for Crestor, the most potent of the anti-cholesterol
drugs, with U.S. consumer group Public Citizen calling for its
withdrawal following a handful of cases.
To date, Britain's Committee on
Safety of Medicines has received 10 reports of suspected rhabdomyolysis
with Crestor, the agency said.
AstraZeneca recently advised that
all patients should start on the initial dose of 10 mg of Crestor
once daily and move up to a higher dose only after a 4-week trial
of 10 mg.
Despite this cautious approach,
the Anglo-Swedish group says all the evidence suggests that Crestor's
safety profile is in line with that of other marketed statins.
Reference
Source 89
Nov 3, 2004
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