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Sanofi-Aventis faces antibiotic investigation
Sanofi-Aventis faces antibiotic investigation
Date published: 24/01/2006
The US
Food and Drink Administration (FDA) is to investigate claims that
Sanofi-Aventis' antibiotic Ketek (telithromycin) causes liver damage. The FDA
has urged doctors to watch patients taking the antibiotic after the journal
Annals of Internal Medicine reported liver damage in three cases. One patient
died, one needed a transplant and the third recovered.
The new type of
antibiotic, known as a ketolide, is used for airway infections, such as acute
sinusitis, tonsillitis and chronic bronchitis, and works by stopping bacteria
produce the proteins they need to reproduce. Ketek was the first ketolide to be
given approval by the FDA in 2004. The administration said: "In pre-marketing
clinical studies, including a large safety trial and data from other countries,
the occurrence of liver problems was infrequent and usually reversible.
"Based on the pre-marketing clinical data, it appeared that the risk of
liver injury with telithromycin was similar to that of other marketed
antibiotics. Nonetheless, the product label advises doctors about the potential
for liver-related adverse events associated with the use of telithromycin." A
Sanofi-Aventis spokesman told Reuters: "With what we know now, we've concluded
that these events do not alter the drug's safety profile." He added the company
would work with health authorities and implement any safety measures
suggested.
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