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Antibiotic
pulled from Canadian and U.S. markets
(AP-CP)
WASHINGTON -- An antibiotic plagued by serious blood-sugar
complications is being pulled by its manufacturer from the U.S. and
Canadian markets.
Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. confirmed Monday that it plans to stop making
and selling Tequin, known generically as gatifloxacin.
The company will return rights to the drug to Japan's Kyorin
Pharmaceutical Co., said Bristol-Myers Squibb spokesman Eric Miller,
noting that the decision was made after a commercial evaluation of the
product as well as an ongoing transition in the company's focus.
Health Canada has been advised that Tequin will no longer be sold to
Canadian pharmacies, Chris Williams, a spokesman for the federal
department, said Monday from Ottawa.
Approved for sale in 1999, Tequin has faced questions about its
effects on blood sugar: it has been associated with both high- and
low-blood sugar in some patients.
Two months ago, a Canadian study found that Tequin was linked to a
fourfold increase in the risk of being treated in hospital for low
blood sugar and an almost 17-times greater risk of developing high
blood sugar. The study of patients over age 65 was published in the
New England Journal of Medicine.
Earlier this year, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration required
increased warnings on the drug's label. Health Canada also issued
warnings about possible adverse effects for diabetics taking Tequin
and had planned to further update safety information, including the
possibility of a "black box" warning used when a drug is potentially
lethal.
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