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Public Citizen
Calls on FDA to Ban Antibiotic Tequin
Antibiotic Is Linked to Increased Risk of Blood Sugar Abnormalities,
Responsible for 20 Deaths and 159 Hospitalizations
WASHINGTON - May 1 - Public Citizen today petitioned the U.S. Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) to ban the antibiotic Tequin (gatifloxacin)
because it is linked to blood sugar abnormalities and has caused
deaths and hospitalizations.
The drug, made by Bristol-Myers Squibb and approved for use in the
United Statesin December 1999, has been linked to severe cases of low
blood sugar and high blood sugar. The drug is used to treat chronic
bronchitis, acute sinusitis, pneumonia, urinary tract infection and
gonorrhea. In 2005, 1.2 million prescriptions for the drug were
filled.
According to Public Citizen’s analysis of adverse events reported to
the FDA, 388 patients had dangerously low or high blood sugar as a
result of taking Tequin between Jan. 1, 2000, and June 30, 2005. Of
those, 20 people died and 159 were hospitalized.
Changes made to the label to warn patients about the dangers of the
drugs are insufficient, said Dr. Sidney Wolfe, director of Public
Citizen’s Health Research Group. More than half a dozen other
antibiotics exist to treat these conditions and all are safer than
Tequin. Bristol-Myers Squibb’s quiet announcement last Friday that it
would no longer manufacture Tequin for economic reasons is similarly
inadequate to protect the public’s health since the company apparently
has no intention, absent FDA action to ban the drug, to stop selling
the large amount of Tequin already in the channels of commerce. Thus,
without an FDA ban, thousands of additional patients will be
prescribed this unacceptably dangerous drug, Wolfe said.
In addition to the adverse events associated with Tequin that were
reported to the FDA, a study published on March 1 in The New England
Journal of Medicine showed that patients receiving Tequin had
approximately 17 times the odds of having dangerously high blood sugar
and four times the odds of having dangerously low blood sugar compared
to those taking other antibiotics. In addition, such blood sugar
abnormalities have been noted in clinical trials, post-marketing
surveillance studies, case reports and other studies.
“This drug carries unique risk but has no unique benefits and
therefore should not be on the market,” Wolfe said.
If Tequin is banned, it will be the fifth drug of 13 approved
quinolone antibiotics to be taken off the market because of serious
safety problems.
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