Naproxen - Yet another drug risks heart
Pain Drug Naproxen Poses Heart Risk, U.S. FDA Says
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (news - web sites) on Monday issued a warning to patients taking the painkiller naproxen after a government study showed the over-the-counter medicine can cause an increased risk of heart problems.
Patients taking naproxen, which is sold as a generic drug and under the brand names Aleve, Naprosyn and others, should not exceed the recommended dose and should not take it for more than 10 days unless directed by their doctor, the FDA (news - web sites) said in a statement.
The news follows studies showing increased heart risks in two prescription painkillers. Merck & Co. Inc. withdrew its
Arthritis drug Vioxx in September. Pfizer Inc. has kept its
Arthritis medicine Celebrex on the market, but has suspended consumer advertising.
The results were part of a National Institutes of Health (news - web sites) trial studying certain anti-inflammatory drugs in patients at risk for Alzheimer's disease (news - web sites). The trial, which included Celebrex, was halted after early results showed a higher risk of cardiovascular problems.
Celebrex showed "no significant increase" in risk for cardiac trouble or stroke in the trial, the NIH said.
Bayer AG makes Aleve, and Roche Palo Alto, a subsidiary of Roche AG, makes Naprosyn.
Naproxen and Celebrex are in a group of drugs called nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs that includes aspirin and ibuprofen. Within that group, Vioxx and Celebrex are part of a class known as Cox-2 inhibitors, along with Pfizer's Bextra.