You can view the current or previous issues of Diabetes Health online, in their entirety, anytime you want.
Click Here To View
See if you qualify for our free healthcare professional magazines. Click here to start your application for Pre-Diabetes Health, Diabetes Health Pharmacist and Diabetes Health Professional.
Latest Diabetes Articles
Popular Diabetes Articles
Highly Recommended Diabetes Articles
Send a link to this page to your friends and colleagues.
Editor’s note: An FDA advisory board voted 14-2 on July 2, 2008 to require drug manufacturers to show that experimental drugs designed to lower blood sugar in diabetics do not increase the risk of cardiovascular disease.
In light of the recent halt of the ACCORD study when it was found that very tight control of blood sugars among type 2s seemed to increase risk of fatal heart attacks, the FDA is concerned that lowering blood sugars is not enough.
The Food and Drug Administration is considering a requirement that before receiving agency approval, new diabetes treatment drugs must not only lower blood sugar levels, but also demonstrate a positive effect on heart disease and lifespan.
Such a requirement would mark a dramatic shift away from traditional benchmarks of diabetes drug performance, which are called “surrogate endpoints” in the drug approval process. Currently, the surrogate endpoints for diabetes treatment drugs center on their ability to blood sugar level controls—a fairly easy goal to track.
But in light of the recent halt of the ACCORD study when it was found that very tight control of blood sugars among type 2s seemed to increase risk of fatal heart attacks, the FDA is concerned that lowering blood sugars is not enough.
Because cardiovascular problems are the number-one killer of people with diabetes, the agency may decide to add new surrogate endpoints, namely a reduced risk of cardiovascular disease and a lengthened lifespan.
The FDA’s discussion was in part inspired by a recent study that strongly suggested that although users of GlaxoSmithKline’s Avandia enjoyed lower blood sugar levels, their lifespan did not increase because of a greater risk for heart attack. (Glaxo says that its own studies showed no increased risk of heart disease among Avandia users.)
Drug manufacturers worry that if the FDA does add these additional conditions to the drug approval process, the new end points will be much harder to track and prove—a circumstance that could considerably lengthen the time and cost it takes to bring a new diabetes drug to market.
An agency panel began discussing the issue on July 1, 2008. It has not said when it will announce its preliminary conclusions.
Categories: Blood Sugar, Diabetes, Diabetes, Food, Legal, Medications, Medications Research, Research, Type 2 Issues
Diabetes Health is the essential resource for people living with diabetes- both newly diagnosed and experienced as well as the professionals who care for them. We provide balanced expert news and information on living healthfully with diabetes. Each issue includes cutting-edge editorial coverage of new products, research, treatment options, and meaningful lifestyle issues.

Comments
It's the flavor of the month. Every time something new that is discovered about this disease, changes the couse of action, and what was wisdom then becomes harmful now.
I't unerving.
I feel betrayed by my body for getting diabetis. No matter how Hard I assist my body in staying healthy, the unknown, or rather all that we don't know and my genes have the control.
Add your comments about this article below. You can add comments as a registered user or anonymously. If you choose to post anonymously your comments will be sent to our moderator for approval before they appear on this page. If you choose to post as a registered user your comments will appear instantly.
When voicing your views via the comment feature, please respect the Diabetes Health community by refraining from comments that could be considered offensive to other people. Diabetes Health reserves the right to remove comments when necessary to maintain the cordial voice of the diabetes community.
For your privacy and protection, we ask that you do not include personal details such as address or telephone number in any comments posted.
Don't have your Diabetes Health Username? Register now and add your comments to all our content.
Register...
Register your Diabetes Health Username here.
Have Your Say...