2 research outputs found

    Safety and tolerability of available urate-lowering drugs: a critical review

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    INTRODUCTION: Urate-lowering therapy (ULT) is the cornerstone of gout management, which is a widespread chronic illness characterized by hyperuricemia, arthropathy, tophus development, and urolithiasis. Since asymptomatic increased serum urate levels are associated with a higher risk of cardiovascular, renal and metabolic disorders, a larger use of ULTs in the general population is expected in the near future. AREAS COVERED: This review will focus on the safety and tolerability profile of the available urate-lowering drugs: xanthine oxidase inhibitors (XOIs), uricosuric agents and injectable uricases. EXPERT OPINION: Older drugs for ULT like allopurinol are well studied and extensively described from typical adverse effects (mild skin rash) to unusual fatal reactions, while febuxostat seems to be overall well tolerated. More evidence is required to define the safety profile of topiroxostat, arhalofenate, tranilast, and sulfinpyrazone. Furthermore, there are some unanswered questions about the pharmacological interactions of probenecid and the hepatotoxicity of benzbromarone. Despite a limited use in clinical practice, combination therapy with lesinurad or verinurad and XOI is not frequently accompanied by side effects. Rasburicase and pegloticase are usually well tolerated with some specific exceptions. Before prescribing UL drugs, physicians should take into account their safety profile tailoring the treatment on the patient characteristics

    Safety and tolerability of injectable lipid-lowering drugs: an update of clinical data.

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    INTRODUCTION: Cardiovascular (CV) diseases are the leading cause of death and disability in the developed countries. Lipid-lowering therapy is a cornerstone of the CV risk modification strategy. The first line treatment for hyperlipidemia is statins, which decrease low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) by 30-50% and proportionally reduce the CV events. However, they are not always enough to achieve LDL-C goals in many patients, and some patients are statin intolerant. For this reason, new powerful injectable lipid-lowering drugs have been developed. AREAS COVERED: The aim of this narrative review was to summarize the more recent clinical data on safety and tolerability of injectable lipid-lowering drugs. After an attentive literature search, the authors resumed here information on proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin 9 inhibitors (evolocumab and alirocumab), small interfering RNA molecule inclisiran, antisense oligonucleotides (mipomersen, volanesorsen, ISIS 681257), and drugs targeting angiopoietin-like protein 3 (evinacumab, IONIS-ANGPTL3Rx). EXPERT OPINION: Injectable lipid-lowering therapy for patients at high risk for CV disease complications or with severe inherited hypercholesterolemias can be an important element of the available therapeutic armamentarium. Clinical data prove the favorable risk-benefit profile of evolocumab, alirocumab, and inclisiran. Mipomersen, volanesorsen, ISIS 681257, evinacumab, and IONIS-ANGPTL3Rx safety is currently less extensively studied, especially in patients with comorbidities and polypharmacotherapy
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