Lee Ming-Han H, Graham Garry G, Williams Kenneth M, Day Richard O
Department of Clinical Pharmacology & Toxicology, St Vincent's Hospital, University of New South Wales, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Drug Saf. 2008;31(8):643-65. doi: 10.2165/00002018-200831080-00002.
Benzbromarone, a potent uricosuric drug, was introduced in the 1970s and was viewed as having few associated serious adverse reactions. It was registered in about 20 countries throughout Asia, South America and Europe. In 2003, the drug was withdrawn by Sanofi-Synthélabo, after reports of serious hepatotoxicity, although it is still marketed in several countries by other drug companies. The withdrawal has greatly limited its availability around the world, and increased difficulty in accessing it in other countries where it has never been available.The overall aim of this paper is to determine if the withdrawal of benzbromarone was in the best interests of gouty patients and to present a benefit-risk assessment of benzbromarone. To determine this, we examined (i) the clinical benefits associated with benzbromarone treatment and compared them with the success of alternative therapies such as allopurinol and probenecid, particularly in patients with renal impairment; (ii) the attribution of the reported cases of hepatotoxicity to treatment with benzbromarone; (iii) the incidence of hepatotoxicity possibly due to benzbromarone; (iv) adverse reactions to allopurinol and probenecid. From these analyses, we present recommendations on the use of benzbromarone.Large reductions in plasma urate concentrations in patients with hyperuricaemia are achieved with benzbromarone and most patients normalize their plasma urate. The half-life of benzbromarone is generally short (about 3 hours); however, a uricosuric metabolite, 6-hydroxybenzbromarone, has a much longer half-life (up to 30 hours) and is the major species responsible for the uricosuric activity of benzbromarone, although its metabolism by cytochrome P450 (CYP) 2C9 in the liver may vary between patients as a result of polymorphisms in this enzyme. It is effective in patients with moderate renal impairment. Standard dosages of benzbromarone (100 mg/day) tend to produce greater hypouricaemic effects than standard doses of allopourinol (300 mg/day) or probenecid (1000 mg/day).Adverse effects associated with benzbromarone are relatively infrequent, but potentially severe. Four cases of benzbromarone-induced hepatotoxicity were identified from the literature. Eleven cases have been reported by Sanofi-Synthélabo, but details are not available in the public domain. Only one of the four published cases demonstrated a clear relationship between the drug and liver injury as demonstrated by rechallenge. The other three cases lacked incontrovertible evidence to support a diagnosis of benzbromarone-induced hepatotoxicity. If all the reported cases are assumed to be due to benzbromarone, the estimated risk of hepatotoxicity in Europe was approximately 1 in 17 000 patients but may be higher in Japan.Benzbromarone is also an inhibitor of CYP2C9 and so may be involved in drug interactions with drugs dependent on this enzyme for clearance, such as warfarin. Alternative drugs to benzbromarone have significant adverse reactions. Allopurinol is associated with rare life-threatening hypersensitivity syndromes; the risk of these reactions is approximately 1 in 56 000. Rash occurs in approximately 2% of patients taking allopurinol and usually leads to cessation of prescription of the drug. Probenecid has also been associated with life-threatening reactions in a very small number of case reports, but it frequently interacts with many renally excreted drugs. Febuxostat is a new xanthine oxidoreductase inhibitor, which is still in clinical trials, but abnormal liver function is the most commonly reported adverse reaction.Even assuming a causal relationship between benzbromarone and hepatotoxicity in the identified cases, benefit-risk assessment based on total exposure to the drug does not support the decision by the drug company to withdraw benzbromarone from the market given the paucity of alternative options. It is likely that the risks of hepatotoxicity could be ameliorated by employing a graded dosage increase, together with regular monitoring of liver function. Determination of CYP2C9 status and consideration of potential interactions through inhibition of this enzyme should be considered. The case for wider and easier availability of benzbromarone for treating selected cases of gout is compelling, particularly for patients in whom allopurinol produces insufficient response or toxicity.We conclude that the withdrawal of benzbromarone was not in the best interest of patients with gout.
苯溴马隆是一种强效促尿酸排泄药物,于20世纪70年代上市,当时被认为几乎没有严重的不良反应。它在亚洲、南美洲和欧洲的约20个国家注册。2003年,赛诺菲-圣德拉堡公司(Sanofi-Synthélabo)在收到严重肝毒性报告后撤回了该药物,不过其他制药公司仍在几个国家销售。此次撤市极大地限制了其在全球的可及性,在从未上市过该药物的其他国家获取它也变得更加困难。本文的总体目的是确定苯溴马隆撤市是否符合痛风患者的最佳利益,并对苯溴马隆进行效益-风险评估。为了确定这一点,我们研究了:(i)苯溴马隆治疗相关的临床益处,并将其与别嘌醇和丙磺舒等替代疗法的疗效进行比较,尤其是在肾功能不全患者中;(ii)将报告的肝毒性病例归因于苯溴马隆治疗;(iii)可能由苯溴马隆导致的肝毒性发生率;(iv)别嘌醇和丙磺舒的不良反应。基于这些分析,我们给出了关于苯溴马隆使用的建议。苯溴马隆可使高尿酸血症患者的血浆尿酸浓度大幅降低,大多数患者的血浆尿酸水平恢复正常。苯溴马隆的半衰期通常较短(约3小时);然而,其促尿酸排泄代谢物6-羟基苯溴马隆的半衰期要长得多(长达30小时),并且是苯溴马隆促尿酸排泄活性的主要成分,尽管由于该酶的基因多态性,其在肝脏中经细胞色素P450(CYP)2C9的代谢在不同患者之间可能存在差异。它对中度肾功能不全患者有效。苯溴马隆的标准剂量(100毫克/天)往往比别嘌醇(300毫克/天)或丙磺舒(1000毫克/天)的标准剂量产生更大的降尿酸作用。与苯溴马隆相关的不良反应相对较少,但可能很严重。从文献中识别出4例苯溴马隆引起的肝毒性病例。赛诺菲-圣德拉堡公司报告了11例,但公众无法获取详细信息。已发表的4例病例中只有1例通过再次用药证明了药物与肝损伤之间存在明确关联。其他3例缺乏确凿证据支持苯溴马隆引起肝毒性的诊断。如果假设所有报告的病例都是由苯溴马隆引起的,欧洲肝毒性的估计风险约为每17000名患者中有1例,但在日本可能更高。苯溴马隆也是CYP2C9的抑制剂,因此可能与依赖该酶清除的药物发生药物相互作用,如华法林。苯溴马隆的替代药物有明显的不良反应。别嘌醇与罕见的危及生命的超敏反应综合征有关;这些反应的风险约为每56000名患者中有1例。服用别嘌醇的患者中约2%会出现皮疹,通常会导致停药。在极少数病例报告中,丙磺舒也与危及生命的反应有关,但它经常与许多经肾脏排泄的药物相互作用。非布司他是一种新型黄嘌呤氧化还原酶抑制剂,仍在临床试验中,但肝功能异常是最常报告的不良反应。即使假设在已识别的病例中苯溴马隆与肝毒性之间存在因果关系,鉴于替代选择匮乏,基于该药物的总暴露量进行的效益-风险评估并不支持制药公司将苯溴马隆撤市的决定。通过采用逐步增加剂量并定期监测肝功能,肝毒性风险可能会得到改善。应考虑测定CYP2C9状态并考虑通过抑制该酶产生的潜在相互作用。对于治疗某些痛风病例,更广泛、更容易获得苯溴马隆的理由很充分,特别是对于那些使用别嘌醇反应不足或出现毒性的患者。我们得出结论,苯溴马隆撤市不符合痛风患者的最佳利益。