Branislava B Raičević, Andrej Belančić, Nikola Mirković, Slobodan M Janković
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Concern over the side effects of anti-obesity medications, particularly if severe, has grown as their use has increased. Thus, the objective was to use trends in the reporting of suspected adverse events associated with anti-obesity medications that have been approved for sale in the European Union to attempt to uncover discrepancies in the safety of these medications. The study was designed as secondary research, based on data about the number of adverse drug reactions (both serious and non-serious) reported to the EudraVigilance database. Trends of the annual reporting rates for the six anti-obesity drugs were analyzed by the Joinpoint Trend Analysis Software that divides the trendline into an optimum number of segments connected by "joinpoints" and tests the significance of the trend within each segment. The trends of serious adverse drug events showed clear differences among the anti-obesity drugs: while all drugs had significant increasing trends during a few initial years after their appearance on the market, only the annual number of reports for semaglutide continued to grow ever since (annual change + 67.1%, p = 0.000). On the contrary, a continuous increase in the reporting rate of non-serious adverse drug events was observed only for liraglutide (annual change + 33.8%, p = 0.000) while for the other anti-obesity drugs, including semaglutide, the trends after the initial period were either negative or did not increase significantly. In conclusion, among the anti-obesity drugs currently approved, only semaglutide shows a continuously increasing trend in the annual reporting of serious adverse events, suggesting a need for further investigation of safety signals.
期刊介绍:
PR&P is jointly published by the American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics (ASPET), the British Pharmacological Society (BPS), and Wiley. PR&P is a bi-monthly open access journal that publishes a range of article types, including: target validation (preclinical papers that show a hypothesis is incorrect or papers on drugs that have failed in early clinical development); drug discovery reviews (strategy, hypotheses, and data resulting in a successful therapeutic drug); frontiers in translational medicine (drug and target validation for an unmet therapeutic need); pharmacological hypotheses (reviews that are oriented to inform a novel hypothesis); and replication studies (work that refutes key findings [failed replication] and work that validates key findings). PR&P publishes papers submitted directly to the journal and those referred from the journals of ASPET and the BPS