Pioglitazone may prevent recurring stroke, heart attack
Pioglitazone, a drug used for type 2
diabetes, may prevent recurrent stroke and heart attacks in people with insulin
resistance but without diabetes. The results of the Insulin Resistance
Intervention after Stroke (IRIS) trial, presented at the International Stroke
Conference 2016 in Los Angeles and published in the New England Journal of
Medicine, suggest a potential new method to prevent stroke and heart attack in
high-risk patients who have already had one stroke or transient ischemic
attack. This large, international study was supported by the National
Institutes of Health’s National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
(NINDS).
The IRIS trial is the first study to provide
evidence that a drug targeting cell metabolism may prevent secondary strokes
and heart attacks even before diabetes develops. Insulin regulates metabolism
and keeps blood sugar levels from getting too high, along with many other
processes, in the body. Insulin resistance is a condition in which the body
produces insulin but does not use it effectively.
“This study represents a novel approach to
prevent recurrent vascular events by reversing a specific metabolic abnormality
thought to increase the risk for future heart attack or stroke,” said Walter J.
Koroshetz, M.D., director of the NINDS.
“The IRIS trial supports the value of more
research to test the vascular benefits of other interventions such as exercise,
diet and medications that have similar effects on metabolism as pioglitazone,”
said Walter N. Kernan, M.D. professor of general medicine at Yale University
School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, and lead author of the study.
More than 3000 patients from seven countries
who had experienced an ischemic stroke or transient ischemic attack within the
previous six months were randomized to receive pioglitazone or placebo for up
to five years in addition to standard care. Ischemic stroke and transient ischemic
attacks can occur when a cerebral blood vessel becomes blocked, cutting off the
delivery of oxygen and nutrients to brain tissue.
In this study, stroke or heart attack
occurred in 9 per cent of participants taking pioglitazone and 11.8 per cent of
patients on placebo, which was a relative decrease of 24 per cent. The results
suggest that 28 strokes or heart attacks may be prevented for every 1000
patients who take pioglitazone for up to five years.
Insulin resistance is a hallmark of type 2
diabetes but also occurs in more than 50 per cent of people with ischemic
stroke who do not have diabetes. People with diabetes are known to have
increased risk of stroke. Previous research suggested that insulin resistance
increases risk for stroke, but the IRIS trial was the first to treat it and
suggested that the therapy reduced the risk of recurrent stroke and heart
attacks. However, pioglitazone is not FDA-approved for the uses studied in the
IRIS trial.
In this study, pioglitazone also reduced the
risk of diabetes by 52 percent in the study participants. The study evidenced
an additional known side effect of the drug, which is an increased risk of bone
fractures. To help doctors and patients
choose the best strategy for preventing recurring strokes, future studies will
attempt to identify a person’s risk of bone fractures due to pioglitazone. As
approved for use in medical practice, the drug also carries additional side
effects.
“More research is needed to determine the
mechanisms by which pioglitazone decreases risk for stroke and heart attack and
increases bone fracture risk, with the hope of developing strategies that
maximize benefit and minimize serious side effects in our patients,” said Dr.
Kernan.
This work was supported by the NINDS, the
nation’s leading funder of research on the brain and nervous system.
Source: http://www.pharmabiz.com/NewsDetails.aspx?aid=93543&sid=2
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