| Literature DB >> 26216600 |
Elizabeth E Roughead1, Esther W Chan, Nam-Kyong Choi, Michio Kimura, Tomomi Kimura, Kiyoshi Kubota, Edward Chia-Cheng Lai, Kenneth K C Man, Tuan Anh Nguyen, Nobuhiro Ooba, Byung-Joo Park, Tsugumichi Sato, Ju-Young Shin, TongTong Wang, Jenna Griffiths, Ian C K Wong, Yea-Huei Kao Yang, Nicole L Pratt.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The prevalence of polymorphisms among the metabolising enzymes and pharmacodynamic receptors relevant for the thiazolidinediones differs by ethnic group, a factor that may modify risk of adverse drug events.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26216600 PMCID: PMC4561996 DOI: 10.1007/s40264-015-0318-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drug Saf ISSN: 0114-5916 Impact factor: 5.606
Fig. 1Sequence symmetry analysis results for incident rosiglitazone use and risk of incident furosemide use. Aust (DVA) Australian Government Department of Veterans’ Affairs healthcare claims database, Australia Australian Government Drug Utilisation Subcommittee dataset, CI confidence interval, IV inverse variance, SE standard error
Fig. 2Sequence symmetry analysis results for incident pioglitazone use and risk of incident furosemide use. Aust (DVA) Australian Government Department of Veterans’ Affairs healthcare claims database, Australia Australian Government Drug Utilisation Subcommittee dataset, CI confidence interval, Japan I Japan Medical Data Centre insurance claims database, Japan II Hamamatsu Medical University Database, IV inverse variance, SE standard error
Fig. 3Sequence symmetry analysis results for incident metformin use and risk of incident furosemide use. Aust (DVA) Australian Government Department of Veterans’ Affairs healthcare claims database, CI confidence interval, Japan I Japan Medical Data Centre insurance claims database, Japan II Hamamatsu Medical University Database, IV inverse variance, SE standard error
Fig. 4Sequence symmetry analysis results for incident diabetes medicine use and risk of incident heart failure hospitalisation: Asian countries. CI confidence interval, Japan I Japan Medical Data Centre insurance claims database, IV inverse variance, SE standard error
| No increased risk of either peripheral oedema or heart failure hospitalisation was found for pioglitazone in the Asian population, while, in the predominantly Caucasian population, pioglitazone was associated with a 47 % increased risk of oedema and an 88 % increased risk of hospitalisation for heart failure. |
| The risk of oedema and heart failure associated with rosiglitazone was generally lower in the Asian population than in the Caucasian population. |
| Our results highlight the need for regulatory agencies to consider differences in response to medicines by ethnicity and for more research to determine the incidence of adverse events across ethnic groups. |