Systems pharmacology of adverse event mitigation by drug combinations.
Sci Transl Med · 2013
Last updated 2026-05-28The study found that the diabetes drug rosiglitazone, which is linked to a higher risk of heart attacks, showed a reduced risk of heart attacks when combined with the drug exenatide. This effect was supported by both a large medical database and lab tests in mice. The researchers also identified over 19,000 other drug combinations in the database that might reduce serious side effects for various medications.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Sci Transl Med, 2013 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 98 |
| Relative citation ratio | 2.90 |
| NIH percentile | 83 |
| Molecules | — |
Abstract
Drugs are designed for therapy, but medication-related adverse events are common, and risk/benefit analysis is critical for determining clinical use. Rosiglitazone, an efficacious antidiabetic drug, is associated with increased myocardial infarctions (MIs), thus limiting its usage. Because diabetic patients are often prescribed multiple drugs, we searched for usage of a second drug ("drug B") in the Food and Drug Administration's Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS) that could mitigate the risk of rosiglitazone ("drug A")-associated MI. In FAERS, rosiglitazone usage is associated with increased occurrence of MI, but its combination with exenatide significantly reduces rosiglitazone-associated MI. Clinical data from the Mount Sinai Data Warehouse support the observations from FAERS. Analysis for confounding factors using logistic regression showed that they were not responsible for the observed effect. Using cell biological networks, we predicted that the mitigating effect of exenatide on rosiglitazone-associated MI could occur through clotting regulation. Data we obtained from the db/db mouse model agreed with the network prediction. To determine whether polypharmacology could generally be a basis for adverse event mitigation, we analyzed the FAERS database for other drug combinations wherein drug B reduced serious adverse events reported with drug A usage such as anaphylactic shock and suicidality. This analysis revealed 19,133 combinations that could be further studied. We conclude that this type of crowdsourced approach of using databases like FAERS can help to identify drugs that could potentially be repurposed for mitigation of serious adverse events.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 24107779 ↗