BACKGROUND: Cilostazol is indicated in Europe to improve walking distance in patients with intermittent claudication. The European Medicines Agency evaluated its benefit/risk and recommended labeling changes to minimize risks. We evaluated the impact of labeling changes by comparing the characteristics of new users of cilostazol before (2002-2012) and after (2014) the implementation of labeling changes (2013). Characteristics evaluated were smoking, early monitoring of users, new cardiovascular (CV) contraindications, concurrent use of ≥2 antiplatelets, monitoring of users at high CV risk, and dose reduction in users treated with potent CYP3A4/CYP2C19 inhibitors.
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the impact of cilostazol labeling changes in diverse European health systems.
METHODS: Observational study of new users of cilostazol in five health care databases: THIN (United Kingdom), EpiChron and SIDIAP (Spain), Swedish National Databases, and GePaRD (Germany).
RESULTS: Overall, 22,593 and 1,821 new users of cilostazol were included before and after labeling changes, respectively. After labeling changes, the prevalence of cilostazol use decreased in all the study populations (13% to 57% reduction). Smoking decreased only in EpiChron (16% of users before vs. 8% after). Early monitoring increased in THIN (50% of users vs. 69%), EpiChron (21% vs. 24%), and Sweden (9% vs. 13%). New CV contraindications decreased in all study populations: THIN, 2% vs. 1%; EpiChron, 2% vs. 0.3%; SIDIAP, 3% vs. 1%; Sweden, 5% vs. 3%; and GePaRD, 12% vs. 11%. Use of ≥2 antiplatelet drugs decreased in THIN (10% vs. 3%), EpiChron (14% vs. 7%), and Sweden (8% vs. 7%). Monitoring of users at high CV risk, compared to users not at high risk, increased in SIDIAP (32% increase of visits rate ratio), Sweden (9%), and GePaRD (17%). Concurrent use of cilostazol 200 mg and potent inhibitors decreased in all study populations: THIN, 20% vs. 6%; EpiChron, 10% vs. 0%; Sweden, 2% vs. 1%; and GePaRD, 4% vs. 2%. Few patients had dose reduction before or after labeling changes.
CONCLUSIONS: This study found a decrease in cilostazol use after labelling changes; results are compatible with a positive effect of these changes in the UK, Spain, Sweden, and Germany.
Castellsague J, Calingaert B, Poblador-Plou B, Giner-Soriano M, Linder M, Scholle O, Arana A, Bui C, Laguna C, Prados-Torres A, Roso-Llorach A, Perez-Gutthann S. Impact of risk minimization measures on the use of cilostazol in Europe. Poster presented at the 33rd ICPE International Conference on Pharmacoepidemiology & Therapeutic Risk Management; August 29, 2017. Montreal, Canada. [abstract] Pharmacoepidemiol Drug Saf. 2017 Aug; 26(Suppl 2):428. doi: 10.1002/pds
Full Text