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WHO Drug Information Vol. 24, No. 4, 2010

WHO Drug Information Vol. 24, No. 4, 2010

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<strong>WHO</strong> <strong>Drug</strong> <strong>Information</strong> <strong>Vol</strong>. <strong>24</strong>, <strong>No</strong>. 4, <strong>2010</strong>Safety and Efficacy IssuesH1N1 influenza vaccine:narcolepsyEuropean Union — The EuropeanMedicines Agency’s (EMA) Committee forMedicinal Products for Human Use(CHMP) has reviewed all available dataon the suspected link between narcolepsyand Pandemrix® an H1N1 influenzavaccine. The Committee concluded thatthe available evidence was insufficient todetermine whether there is any linkbetween Pandemrix® and reports ofnarcolepsy, and that further studies werenecessary to fully understand this issue.The Committee agreed that at present thebenefit-risk balance for Pandemrix®continues to be positive and that whilethe review is still ongoing there was noneed for Europe-wide restrictions on use.Narcolepsy is a rare sleep disorder thatcauses a person to fall asleep suddenlyand unexpectedly. Its precise cause isunknown, but it is generally considered tobe triggered by a combination of geneticand environmental factors.As per 17 September <strong>2010</strong>, there were81 reports from healthcare professionalssuggestive of narcolepsy, all collectedthrough spontaneous reporting systems.Of these, 34 reports come from Sweden,30 from Finland, 10 from France, six from<strong>No</strong>rway and one from Portugal. In addition,there are a further 13 consumerreports from Sweden and two from<strong>No</strong>rway. The age range of patients isbetween four and 52 years.Reference: EMA Press Release, EMA/CHMP/588294/<strong>2010</strong>, 23 September <strong>2010</strong> at http://www.ema. europa.euStatins: interstitial lungdiseaseCanada — Interstitial lung disease (ILD)is a heterogeneous group of disordersthat can be acute or chronic and maylead to pulmonary fibrosis and pulmonaryinsufficiency (1, 2). Signs and symptomsinclude difficulty breathing, nonproductivecough and diffuse crackles heard onauscultation. ILD has been reported inassociation with several drugs, such asamiodarone, azathioprine, carbamazepine,cyclophosphamide, methotrexateand nitrofurantoin (1, 2).During the past 15 years, 29 cases of ILDsuspected of being associated with HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors (statins) havebeen published (3–14). Of these, 16describe a positive dechallenge with orwithout immunosuppressive treatment(3,4, 6, 8–11,14 ) and three cases describeda positive rechallenge (4, 9). Insome of these reports, ILD was part ofsystemic clinical features consistent withpotential drug-induced diseases such aslupus (7), polymyositis (4, 12), dermatomyositis(5) and Churg-Strauss syndrome(14).A systematic review of the suspectedassociation between ILD and statins hasrecently been published (15). Althoughthe mechanism of potential statin-inducedILD is unknown, some authors suggestedit could be mediated by the inhibition ofphospholipases; an effect of the statinson mitochondrial metabolism; or immunemediated (15).As of 31 March <strong>2010</strong>, Health Canadareceived 8 adverse reaction reports ofILD, or pathologies associated with ILD,299

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