4.7 Article

Cardiovascular safety and gastrointestinal tolerability of etoricoxib vs diclofenac in a randomized controlled clinical trial (The MEDAL study)

Journal

RHEUMATOLOGY
Volume 48, Issue 4, Pages 425-432

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/rheumatology/kep005

Keywords

NSAIDs; Rheumatoid arthritis; Osteoarthritis; COX-2 inhibitors; Cardiovascular safety; Gastrointestinal safety; Analgesia

Categories

Funding

  1. Merck Co., Inc.
  2. Whitehouse Station, NJ, USA
  3. National Institute for Health Research [NF-SI-0508-10299] Funding Source: researchfish
  4. Versus Arthritis
  5. Cancer Research UK [18475] Funding Source: researchfish

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Objective. To compare cardiovascular (CV) and other safety and efficacy parameters of etoricoxib 60 and 90 mg, and diclofenac 150 mg. Methods. This double-blind study randomized OA patients to etoricoxib 90 mg, then to 60 mg once daily vs diclofenac 75 mg twice daily; RA patients were randomized to etoricoxib 90 mg once daily or diclofenac 75 mg twice daily. The primary endpoint was non-inferiority of etoricoxib vs diclofenac for thrombotic CV events (95 CI upper bound of hazard ratio 1.30). Other safety and efficacy parameters were evaluated in cohorts of patients based on etoricoxib dose and disease. Results. A total of 23 504 patients were randomized with mean treatment duration from 19.4 to 20.8 months. The thrombotic CV risk hazard ratio (HR) (etoricoxib to diclofenac) was 0.96 (95 CI 0.81, 1.15), consistent with non-inferiority of etoricoxib to diclofenac. The cumulative gastrointestinal (GI)/liver adverse events (AEs) discontinuation rate was significantly lower for etoricoxib than diclofenac in each patient cohort; HR (95 CI) of 0.46 (0.39, 0.54), 0.52 (0.42, 0.63) and 0.49 (0.39, 0.62) for the 60 mg OA, 90 mg OA and RA cohorts. The maximum average change in systolic blood pressure (BP) with etoricoxib was 3.43.6 mmHg (diastolic BP: 1.01.5 mmHg), while diclofenac produced a maximum average change of 0.91.9 mmHg (diastolic BP: 0.00.5 mmHg). Both agents resulted in similar efficacy regardless of etoricoxib dose. Conclusion. Long-term etoricoxib use is associated with a risk of thrombotic CV events comparable with that of diclofenac. Compared with diclofenac, etoricoxib demonstrated a greater risk of renovascular AEs, but a more favourable GI/liver tolerability profile.

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