Merck MRK known as MSD
outside Canada and the United States, announced the primary results of the
Trial Evaluating Cardiovascular Outcomes with Sitagliptin (TECOS), a
placebo-controlled study of the cardiovascular (CV) safety of MSD's DPP-4
inhibitor, JANUVIA(R) (sitagliptin), added to usual care in more than 14,000
patients.(i) The study achieved its primary composite CV endpoint of
non-inferiority (defined as the time to the first confirmed event of any of
the following: CV-related death, nonfatal myocardial infarction (MI),
nonfatal stroke, or hospitalization for unstable angina) compared to usual
care without sitagliptin.(i) Overall, the primary endpoint occurred in 11.4
percent (n=839) of sitagliptin-treated patients compared with 11.6 percent
(n=851) of placebo-treated patients in the Intention-to-Treat (ITT) analysis
(HR=0.98; 95% CI [0.89-1.08]), and in 9.6 percent (n=695) of patients in
both the sitagliptin and placebo groups in the Per Protocol (PP) analysis
(HR=0.98; 95% CI [0.88-1.09]; p<0.001 for non-inferiority).(1,i)
In addition, there was no increase in hospitalization for heart failure, and
rates of all-cause mortality were similar in both treatment groups, which
were two key secondary endpoints.(i) These data were presented on June 8 at
the 75(th) Scientific Sessions of the American Diabetes Association and were
also published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
"Patients with type 2 diabetes need antihyperglycemic medicines to help
control their blood sugar. Because these patients are at increased risk for
cardiovascular complications, understanding the cardiovascular safety of
these medicines is important," said study co-chair Rury Holman, Professor of
Diabetic Medicine and Diabetes Trials Unit Director, University of Oxford.
"The results from TECOS showed that sitagliptin did not increase the risk of
cardiovascular events in a diverse group of patients with type 2 diabetes at
high cardiovascular risk."
"TECOS contains a robust and rich data set derived from over 14,000 diabetic
patients followed for almost approximately 3 years," explained Dr. Paul
Armstrong, Distinguished University Professor, Department of Medicine
(Cardiology), University of Alberta. "With TECOS, we have learned that when
sitagliptin is added to usual care it did not increase the risk of
cardiovascular events and there was no increase in heart failure."
"The TECOS study provides important new information highlighting the
cardiovascular and safety profile of sitagliptin," added Dr. Lawrence
Leiter, Endocrinologist at St. Michael's Hospital in Toronto.
Additional Findings from the TECOS CV Safety Trial
TECOS was an event-driven study designed to assess the long-term CV safety
of the addition of sitagliptin to usual care, compared to usual care without
sitagliptin, in patients with type 2 diabetes and established CV
disease.(ii) In addition to showing no increased risk for the primary
composite CV endpoint, sitagliptin also met the secondary composite CV
endpoint (defined as the time to the first confirmed event of any of the
following: CV-related death, nonfatal MI, or nonfatal stroke), showing
non-inferiority compared to usual care without sitagliptin (HR=0.99; 95% CI
[0.89-1.11]; p<0.001 for non-inferiority).(i)
In additional secondary endpoints assessing time to first confirmed event,
hospitalization for heart failure was reported in 3.1 percent (n=228) of
sitagliptin-treated patients and 3.1 percent (n=229) of placebo-treated
patients (HR=1.00; 95% CI [0.83-1.20]).(i) All-cause mortality was similar
in both treatment groups, occurring in 7.5 percent (n=547) of patients in
the sitagliptin group and 7.3 percent (n=537) in the placebo group (HR=1.01;
95% CI [0.90-1.14]).(i)
Acute pancreatitis was uncommon, occurring in 0.3 percent of patients in the
sitagliptin group (n=23) and 0.2 percent of patients in the placebo group
(n=12); the difference was not statistically different between groups
(p=0.065).(i) Pancreatic cancer was also uncommon, occurring in 0.1 percent
of patients in the sitagliptin group (n=9) and 0.2 percent of patients in
the placebo group (n=14), and was not statistically different between groups
(p=0.322).(i)
In additional secondary analyses of the composite of time to first
hospitalization for heart failure or CV death, the first confirmed
hospitalization for heart failure or CV death occurred in 7.3 percent
(n=538) in the sitagliptin group compared with 7.2 percent (n=525) for
placebo (HR=1.02; 95% CI [0.90-1.15]).(i) The proportion of patients with
CV death was 5.2 percent (n=380) in the sitagliptin group compared with 5.0
percent (n=366) in the placebo group (HR 1.03; 95% CI [0.89-1.19]).(i)
The proportion of patients with non-CV death was 2.3 percent in both
treatment groups.(i) Death due to infection was 0.6 percent and 0.7
percent in the sitagliptin and placebo groups, respectively.(i) A slight
reduction in eGFR (estimated glomerular filtration rate), a measure of renal
function, was observed in both treatment groups during the study: at month
48, mean change from baseline in eGFR was -4.0 +/- 18.4 mL/min/1.73m(2) in
the sitagliptin group compared to -2.8 +/- 18.3 mL/min/1.73m(2) for
placebo.(i)
"We believe the results of TECOS provide important clinical information
about the cardiovascular safety profile of sitagliptin," said Dr. Roger M.
Perlmutter, president, Merck Research Laboratories. "The TECOS CV safety
trial reflects the best efforts of clinical scientists at the University of
Oxford, the Duke Clinical Research Institute and Merck on behalf of patients
around the world who suffer from type 2 diabetes."
To minimize any potential effect that differences in glucose control might
have on CV outcomes, the study aimed to achieve similar glucose control
(glycemic equipoise) between treatment groups.(ii) At four months, mean
HbA1c level was 0.4 percent lower in the sitagliptin group compared with
placebo, and this narrowed to 0.1 percent lower during patient follow-up.(i)
This resulted in an overall difference of -0.29 percent in patients treated
with sitagliptin versus placebo.(i) Compared with patients treated with
placebo, fewer patients treated with sitagliptin received additional
antihyperglycemic agents during the study period (1,591 vs. 2,046 patients,
respectively; p<0.001) and were less likely to start chronic insulin therapy
(542 vs. 744 patients, respectively; p<0.001).(i)
Study Methods and Design
TECOS was led by an independent academic research collaboration between the
University of Oxford Diabetes Trials Unit (DTU) and the Duke University
Clinical Research Institute (DCRI), and was sponsored by MSD.(ii) A total
of 14,735 patients from 38 countries were randomized between December 2008
and July 2012.(i) Of these, 14,671 were included in the ITT analysis
population, with 7,332 assigned to sitagliptin and 7,339 to placebo, in
addition to existing therapy. The median patient follow-up was three years,
with a maximum follow-up of 5.7 years.(i)
Patients enrolled in the trial had type 2 diabetes with established CV
disease in the coronary, cerebral, or peripheral arteries.(i) Patients
were at least 50 years of age, had a baseline HbA1c between 6.5 and 8.0
percent, and were dose-stable for at least three months on either:
monotherapy or dual combination therapy with metformin, pioglitazone or a
sulfonylurea; or insulin as monotherapy or in combination with a stable dose
of metformin.(i) Participants were randomly assigned to treatment with
sitagliptin 100 mg daily (50 mg daily if baseline eGFR was >=30 and <50
mL/min/1.73m(2) ) or matching placebo.(i)
The primary non-inferiority hypothesis was assessed by determining whether
the upper bound of the 95 percent confidence interval for the hazard ratio
for the risk of the primary composite CV endpoint (time to first event)
between the sitagliptin and placebo groups in the PP population did not
exceed 1.3, with a key supporting analysis in the ITT population.(i) If
non-inferiority on the primary composite CV endpoint was met, superiority
was to be evaluated in the ITT population.(i)
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