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Fournier Pharma Announces Results of the Largest Clinical Trial in Patients With Type 2 Diabetes Demonstrating Positive Effects of Fenofibrate Therapy on Cardiovascular Events

Dallas, Texas, November 14 (ots/PRNewswire)

- FIELD Confirms Fenofibrate Produces Macrovascular and
Microvascular  Benefits in Diabetic Patients Without Previous
Cardiovascular Disease  Although Primary Endpoint is not met
Results of the largest intervention study ever conducted for the
prevention of cardiovascular disease in people with diabetes showed
that patients treated with fenofibrate had a reduced rate of total
cardiovascular events - a pre-specified secondary endpoint defined as
a composite of cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction (MI),
stroke and coronary and carotid revascularizations - compared to
patients treated with placebo. In addition to the macrovascular
benefit, the findings also suggested a beneficial effect of
fenofibrate on microvascular complications associated with diabetes,
specifically renal and eye disease.
Results of the landmark Fenofibrate Intervention and Event
Lowering in Diabetes (FIELD) study were presented today at the annual
congress of the American Heart Association and published online in
The Lancet[1].
"People with type 2 diabetes face a three- to four-fold higher
risk for cardiovascular disease than those without diabetes and more
than half of people with diabetes will die from cardiovascular
disease," said Professor Anthony Keech, MD, University of Sydney,
Australia, and FIELD principal investigator. "The FIELD study
findings indicate that fenofibrate reduces the risk of cardiovascular
disease, mainly through the prevention of non-fatal myocardial
infarctions and coronary revascularizations."
FIELD study design
FIELD was a double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled trial
which recruited 9795 patients in Australia, New Zealand and Finland.
The primary outcome of the trial was coronary events (coronary heart
disease [CHD] death or non-fatal MI). The outcome for pre-specified
subgroup analyses was total cardiovascular events, defined as the
combined incidence of cardiovascular death, MI, stroke and coronary
and carotid revascularizations. Tertiary criteria included measures
of renal disease (progression of albuminuria) and diabetic eye
disease (laser treatment for retinopathy).
Patients were on treatment for a median of five years and
evaluated for the effect of micronised fenofibrate once daily versus
placebo on coronary heart and cardiovascular disease in patients with
type 2 diabetes. Participants were evaluated every six months for
outcome events and safety assessments.
The FIELD study was unique in that the patient population includes
the largest subgroup of primary prevention patients ever included in
a type 2 diabetes trial; 7664 patients (78% of the study population)
showed no signs of prior cardiovascular disease at study entry. The
median duration of diabetes was 5 years and the patients' blood
glucose levels were well controlled (median HbA1c = 6.9%).
Three-fifths (60%) of patients were on diet recommendations or
monotherapy alone for their diabetes. Moreover, few patients at
baseline suffered from retinopathy (8%) or nephropathy (3%). About
one-third (38%) of patients had both triglyceride concentrations of >
1.7 mmol/l and HDL-cholesterol levels of < 1.03 mmol/l in men and <
1.29 mmol/l in women. The majority (60%) of patients were under 65
years of age at screening.
FIELD study results
For the study's primary endpoint of coronary events (coronary
heart disease death or non-fatal MI), patients treated with
fenofibrate experienced an 11-percent reduction in events versus
placebo (5% vs 6%, p=0.16), a statistically non-significant
difference. For the study's pre-specified secondary endpoint of total
cardiovascular events, patients on fenofibrate experienced a
statistically significant 11-percent reduction in total events versus
placebo (13% vs 14%, p=0.035). There was an overall 21-percent
reduction of coronary revascularization (6% vs 7%, p=0.003), also a
pre-specified secondary endpoint.
Treatment effects were significantly larger in the patients with
no previous cardiovascular disease than in those with previous
cardiovascular disease (comprising 78% of all trial participants). In
this subgroup of patients, investigators reported:
  • A significant 19-percent reduction in total cardiovascular disease events (p<0.004, secondary endpoint), corresponding to an absolute risk reduction rate of 2 percent, or the equivalent of needing to treat 50 patients for 5 years to prevent one or more CVD events in one patient;
  • A significant 25-percent reduction in coronary events (p=0.014, primary endpoint) in a post-hoc subgroup analysis.
There were more coronary deaths and fewer other vascular deaths in
the fenofibrate group, neither being statistically significant (both
p>0.2). There was also a non-significant increase in total mortality
that was not linked to any particular cause and was consistent with
statistical chance.
In the total population of FIELD, study investigators reported a
favourable effect of treatment with fenofibrate on the progression of
albuminuria (an early indicator of renal disease), as previously
reported in the DAIS trial[2]. Another important finding was the
significant, favourable effect of fenofibrate on the need for one or
more laser treatments for retinopathy.
  • Progression to albuminuria was significantly reduced by fenofibrate, with 466 fenofibrate-allocated patients (10%) progressing from normo- to microalbuminuria or from micro- to macroalbuminuria, compared to 539 patients (11%) allocated placebo and more frequent regression of albuminuria also occurred with fenofibrate (p=0.002 for all shifts); in addition, the number of patients requiring dialysis during the study was 21 in those taking placebo and 16 in patients taking fenofibrate.
  • Significantly fewer patients assigned fenofibrate needed one or more retinal laser treatments (n=178, 3.6%) than controls taking placebo (n=253, 5.2%), representing a 30-percent reduction (p=0.0003).
Taken together, these findings suggest a beneficial effect of
fenofibrate on the microvasculature, which cannot be explained by
changes in HbA1c or concomitant medications, or by the minor
reduction in blood pressure in the fenofibrate group. This is the
first time that a lipid-lowering agent has been shown to reduce the
risk of macrovascular and microvascular events in a large-scale
clinical study in patients with type 2 diabetes.
Physicians participating in the study were also allowed to add at
their discretion other medications commonly used in diabetic
patients, including lipid-lowering agents (such as statins),
anti-hypertensives, and anti-thrombotics. By the end of the study,
twice as many patients in the placebo arm were receiving statins
versus the fenofibrate group (32% vs 16%, p<0.0001).
The significantly more common use of statin therapy among patients
allocated placebo in FIELD may have masked a larger treatment benefit
from fibrate therapy. After adjustment for new lipid-lowering agents,
in a time-dependent Cox regression analysis, fenofibrate reduced the
risk of coronary heart disease events by 19 percent (p=0.01) and of
total cardiovascular disease events by 15 percent (p=0.004).
"People with type 2 diabetes have been well represented in other
landmark trials of lipid-lowering treatment for the secondary
prevention of cardiovascular disease, but what is interesting about
the FIELD trial is that it shows that fenofibrate treatment can
prevent macro- and microvascular complications in people in early
stages of type 2 diabetes with or without dyslipidaemia," concluded
Professor Keech.
FIELD study: Tolerance
Fenofibrate was generally well tolerated irrespective of
concomitant therapy. Similar numbers of patients in the placebo and
fenofibrate groups discontinued treatment. Twenty-four (0.5%)
patients on placebo and 38 (0.8%) on fenofibrate had possible serious
adverse drug reactions. One patient on placebo, and three allocated
fenofibrate had rhabdomyolysis, which fully resolved in each case.
More patients allocated to fenofibrate than those on placebo
experienced pancreatitis (0.8% vs 0.5%), but the numbers were small.
There were also small reported increases of pulmonary embolism (1.0%
vs 0.7%) and deep vein thrombosis (1.4% vs 1.0%) associated with
fenofibrate.
Commenting on the implications of FIELD, study investigators,
reporting in The Lancet, have suggested that "FIELD provides
information to help guide clinicians on the future use of fenofibrate
in patients with type 2 diabetes." Further, "the results are likely
to be of particular importance among patients without previous
cardiovascular disease and in settings where both the prevention of
non-fatal macrovascular events and microvascular complications are
judged important."
Notes to Editors:
FIELD study endorsements, locations, co-ordination and sponsorship
The FIELD study is endorsed by the National Heart Foundation of
Australia, Diabetes Australia, the New Zealand Society for the Study
of Diabetes and the Finnish Diabetes Association. The FIELD study was
conducted at 63 sites in Australia, Finland and New Zealand and was
coordinated independently of the sponsors by the National Health and
Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Clinical Trials Centre, University
of Sydney, Sydney, Australia. Laboratoires Fournier SA, of Dijon,
France, sponsored FIELD and supplied fenofibrate and matching placebo
medication.
About fenofibrate
Fenofibrate is approved for use in nearly 80 countries worldwide.
Approximately 26 million prescriptions have been written and the
cumulative number of patients who have received Lipanthyl is about 32
million. Fenofibrate is registered as Lipanthyl(R), Tricor(R),
Lipidil(R), Fulcro(R), Secalip(R) and Catalip(R).
About Fournier Pharma
Fournier Pharma is dedicated to improving health and quality
of life through innovative healthcare products and services for the
prevention and treatment of human diseases.
With a turnover of 593 million Euros in 2004, Fournier Pharma
employs 3,400 people across 30 sites in all key markets of the world,
with France and the USA being its leading markets.
Soundly established on a bedrock of 30 years experience in
research into lipid disorders and cardiovascular diseases, Fournier
Pharma focuses its activities onto treating metabolism pathologies
and preventing cardiovascular risk.
With an investment in research and development accounting for 13%
of its turnover, Fournier Pharma focuses on the discovery of new drug
targets and innovative drugs in the field of metabolic diseases.
Fournier Pharma has a promising portfolio in the cardio-metabolic
field, including Dualtis(R), a combination of fenofibrate and
metformin, other associations of products, as well as research
projects concerning nuclear receptors.
For more details, please visit www.fournierpharma.com.
Fournier Pharma was acquired by the Belgian company Solvay in
2005.
SOLVAY is an international chemicals and pharmaceuticals group
with headquarters in Brussels. It is present in more than 50
countries and employs some 33,000 people in its Chemicals, Plastics
and Pharmaceuticals activities. Including Fournier Pharma, its sales
amounted to EUR 8.5 million in 2004. Solvay is listed on the Euronext
100 index of top European companies.
Details are available at www.solvay.com.
About diabetes
  • Type 2 diabetes mellitus is a disease with a dramatically increasing prevalence throughout the world. The global disease burden is mainly driven by an increased risk of cardiovascular disease as well as microvascular diseases such as end-stage renal disease and blindness.
  • There are currently more than 194 million people with diabetes worldwide. If nothing is done to slow the epidemic, the number will exceed 333 million by 2025.
  • Diabetes is the fourth main cause of death in most developed countries.
  • Diabetes is the leading cause of blindness and visual impairment in adults in developed countries.
  • Cardiovascular disease is the number-one cause of death in industrialized countries. It is also set to overtake infectious diseases as the most common cause of death in many parts of the less developed world.
  • People with diabetes are two to four times more likely to develop cardiovascular disease than people without diabetes.
  • The populations of most countries are ageing. Diabetes is particularly common in ageing populations and is increasing in proportion to the number of people living longer.
  • The devastating complications of diabetes, such as blindness, kidney failure and heart disease, are imposing a huge burden on healthcare services. It is estimated that diabetes accounts for between 5% and 10% of a nation's health budget.
More information and a full media kit is available in the
Exhibitors' Newsroom
References
[1] Keech, A, et al. "The Effect of Fenofibrate on Major Coronary
Heart Disease (CHD) Events in People With Type 2 Diabetes: the
Fenofibrate Intervention and Event Lowering in Diabetes (FIELD)
Study." 4. Presented at the Scientific Sessions of the American Heart
Association congress, 14 November 2005.
[2] Ansquer JC, Foucher C, Rattier S, Taskinen MR, Steiner G for
the DAIS investigators. Fenofibrate reduces progression to
microalbuminuria over 3 years in the placebo-controlled study in type
2 diabetes: results from Diabetes Atherosclerosis Intervention Study
(DAIS). Am J Kidney Dis 2005; 45: 485-93.

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