Etoricoxib's safety on the gastrointestinal tract and cardiovascular was evaluated in the MEDAL Program consisting of three clinical trials: MEDAL (
Multinational
Etoricoxib Versus
Diclofenac
Arthritis
Long-term Study), EDGE (
Etoricoxib versus
Diclofenac Sodium
Gastrointestinal Tolerability and
Effectiveness) and EDGE II.
Pooled analysis from these trials shows that etoricoxib has the same rates of thrombotic cardiovascular events as those of
diclofenac, including thrombotic events (1.24 events per 100 patient-years with etoricoxib versus 1.3 events per 100 patient-years with diclofenac), arterial thrombotic events (1.05 events per 100 patient-years with etoricoxib versus 1.10 events per 100 patient-years with diclofenac) and risks of
heart attack,
stroke and death of vascular cause (0.84 per 100 patient-years with etoricoxib versus 0.87 events per 100 patient-years with diclofenac). Rates of upper gastrointestinal events (ulcer, bleeding, perforation, and obstruction) are in favor of the etoricoxib group (0.67 events per 100 patient-years with etoricoxib versus 0.97 events per 100 patient-years with diclofenac), but rates of complicated upper gastrointestinal events are similar between two groups. Like rofecoxib's VIGOR trial, the MEDAL Program was also criticized, this time due to Merck's choice of comparator group. In a testimony before the FDA Arthritis Advisory Committee,
Sidney M. Wolfe pointed out that unlike the VIGOR trial, in which the active comparator was naproxen, three trials in the MEDAL Program used diclofenac as an active comparator. Wolfe showed that when etoricoxib is compared to naproxen (which is a nonselective COX inhibitor), etoricoxib significantly increases the risks of cardiovascular events to such a degree that they "are similar to rofecoxib/naproxen comparison". However, when etoricoxib is compared to diclofenac (which inhibits COX-2 more preferentially and has a worse CV safety profile than placebo), the difference was not statistically significant. He also noted the increase in other cardiac events, such as heart failure and high blood pressure. == References ==