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Drug Profile

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Do Not Use [what does this mean?]
Generic drug name: teriparatide (terr ih PAR a tyd)
Brand name(s): FORTEO
GENERIC: not available FAMILY: Hormones
Find the drug label by searching at DailyMed.

Alternative Treatment [top]

Safety Warnings For This Drug [top]

Osteosarcoma

An increase in the incidence of osteosarcoma (a malignant bone tumor) was observed in male and female rats treated with teriparatide. Osteosarcoma has been reported in patients treated with teriparatide in the post-marketing setting; however, an increased risk of osteosarcoma has not been observed in observational studies in humans. There are limited data assessing the risk of osteosarcoma beyond 2 years of teriparatide use.  

Hypercalcemia (high blood calcium levels)

Teriparatide has not been studied in patients with pre-existing hypercalcemia. It may cause hypercalcemia and may exacerbate hypercalcemia in patients with pre-existing hypercalcemia. 

Risk of Cutaneous Calcification

Serious reports of calciphylaxis (a serious, uncommon disease in which calcium accumulates in small blood vessels of the fat and skin tissues) and worsening of previously stable skin calcification have been reported in the postmarketing setting in patients taking teriparatide. Risk factors for development of calciphylaxis include underlying autoimmune disease, kidney failure, and concomitant warfarin or systemic corticosteroid use. 

Risk of Kidney Stones

In clinical trials, the frequency of kidney stones was similar in patients treated with teriparatide and patients treated with placebo. However, teriparatide has not been studied in patients with active kidney stones. Use of terparatide in patients with pre-existing hypercalciuria (high urine calcium levels) or suspected/known active kidney stones may exacerbate the condition.

Orthostatic Hypotension

In short-term clinical pharmacology studies of teriparatide in healthy volunteers, transient episodes of symptomatic orthostatic hypotension (low blood pressure upon standing) were observed in 5% of volunteers. Typically, these events began within 4 hours of dosing and resolved within a few minutes to a few hours.

Risk of Digoxin Toxicity

Hypercalcemia transiently caused by teriparatide may predispose patients to digoxin toxicity. 

Facts About This Drug [top]

Teriparatide (FORTEO) was approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in November 2002 for the treatment of osteoporosis in postmenopausal women who are at high risk of fracture and to increase bone mass in men with osteoporosis, who are also at high risk of fracture. In 2009, teriparatide was also approved for the treatment of men and women with osteoporosis associated with sustained systemic glucocorticoid therapy at high risk of fracture.[1]

This drug is a shortened version of...

Teriparatide (FORTEO) was approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in November 2002 for the treatment of osteoporosis in postmenopausal women who are at high risk of fracture and to increase bone mass in men with osteoporosis, who are also at high risk of fracture. In 2009, teriparatide was also approved for the treatment of men and women with osteoporosis associated with sustained systemic glucocorticoid therapy at high risk of fracture.[1]

This drug is a shortened version of the human parathyroid hormone, the hormone that is the primary regulator of calcium and phosphate metabolism in bone and kidney. Teriparatide is administered by subcutaneous (under the skin) injection daily and is approved for a maximum of two years of use.

We list this drug as a Do Not Use drug because it has not been shown to reduce fractures in men and caused bone cancer in animal studies.

Use in women

To approve teriparatide for use in women, the FDA studied the occurrence of new, X-ray-diagnosed fractures of the vertebrae (the bones that make up the spine), referred to as vertebral fractures. Vertebral fractures are not broken bones in the common use of the phrase; rather, they are defined as changes in the height of previously underformed vertebrae seen on X-ray. Many such fractures are not symptomatic.

Women who were defined as being at high risk of fracture were those with at least one vertebral fracture before being treated with teriparatide.

Use in men

Teriparatide is not approved to treat osteoporosis in men, but rather to increase bone mass in those with osteoporosis who are at high risk for fracture. The definition of men at high risk of fracture is the same as for women: at least one vertebral fracture. The drug does increase bone mass in men, but there are no data available at this time showing that teriparatide reduces the risk of fracture in men. In our opinion, the FDA should not have approved this drug for use in men without evidence that it reduces their fracture risk.

Strong labeling and special conditions required for marketing

Teriparatide was approved with a number of severe conditions and restrictions on its distribution and promotion because it caused osteosarcoma, a type of bone cancer, in laboratory animals. The professional product labeling or package insert for the drug contains a black-box warning about osteosarcoma. A black-box warning is the strongest type of warning that the FDA can require on a drug's labeling. It is extremely unusual to see a new drug marketed with a black-box warning.

The drug's manufacturer also committed to the establishment of a postapproval safety surveillance program to evaluate whether there is an association between treatment with teriparatide and the occurrence of osteosarcoma in patients, since it was shown to cause this bone cancer in animals. Data collection for the program was to begin within 90 days after the first marketed use of teriparatide. Progress reports are to be submitted to the FDA at six months, one year and annually thereafter. The program is to last for 10 years. We have serious concerns about this program, as described in the FDA's approval letter for teriparatide. It remains to be seen whether or not, as the program is planned, it will actually be able to detect a link between the drug and osteosarcoma (if one exists) in a timely manner.

In addition, the manufacturer agreed to restricted initial marketing of teriparatide by a limited sales force with no direct-to-consumer advertising and restrictions on the distribution of free samples of the drug. Further, the company agreed to conduct a physician education program to emphasize that teriparatide is approved only to treat patients at high risk for osteoporotic fractures.

Public Citizen's actions

Because of our concerns about the safety of this drug in relation to its effectiveness, Public Citizen's Health Research Group testified before the FDA's Endocrinologic Drugs Advisory Committee on July 27, 2001, to urge that the drug not be approved.[2]

We testified that the ability of teriparatide to cause cancer — in this case osteosarcoma — in rats was some of the most striking animal carcinogenicity data we had ever seen. Tumors developed in the animals at even the lowest dose level of teriparatide administered, which was only three times the drug levels in humans.

Information on effectiveness

In effectiveness studies, when teriparatide given with calcium and vitamin D was compared with placebo given with calcium and vitamin D, the risk of one or more new vertebral fractures was reduced from 14% in women given the placebo to 5% in those given teriparatide. Thus, the absolute difference in the risk of a new vertebral fracture with teriparatide compared with placebo was 9.3%. The risk of a new vertebral fracture with teriparatide relative to the risk with placebo was 65%. This result was statistically significant.

Using the absolute difference in risk of a new vertebral fracture, the number of patients that need to be treated with teriparatide for a period of 19 months — the length of the effectiveness studies — to prevent one new vertebral fracture can be calculated and is 11 patients.

There is no direct comparison between teriparatide and the very popular and heavily promoted osteoporosis drug alendronate (FOSAMAX); however, a study published in the medical journal The Lancet in 1996 provides some basis for a comparison.[3] In women similar to those in the teriparatide studies, the number that needed to be treated with alendronate to prevent one new vertebral fracture after 36 months was 14. This information is only given for context; the most valid type of information would be a direct head-to-head comparison of teriparatide to alendronate, which has not been done at this time.

One direct comparison of teriparatide to alendronate is available: cost. One year of treatment with teriparatide is $8,478 while alendronate, in the form of FOSAMAX, is $1,033. This is a difference of over $7,400 for one year of treatment. Generic alendronate is even less expensive at $105 for a year's treatment, a savings of more than $8,300 a year over the cost of teriparatide. U.S. retail prescriptions for teriparatide in 2008 were $292 million.

The following table is taken from the FDA-approved professional product labeling for teriparatide and summarizes the sites of fractures, other than vertebral fractures, in women given teriparatide compared with those given a placebo. There were 541 women in the teriparatide group and 544 in the placebo group. The number of fractures at a particular site is given, and the percentage of the group represented by that number is reported in parentheses.

FRACTURE SITE TERIPARATIDE PLACEBO
Wrist 2 (0.4%) 7 (1.3%)
Ribs 3 (0.6%) 5 (0.9%)
Hip 1 (0.2%) 4 (0.7%)
Ankle/Foot 1 (0.2%) 4 (0.7%)
Humerus (arm bone) 2 (0.4%) 2 (0.4%)
Pelvis 0 3 (0.6%)
Other 6 (1.1%) 8 (1.5%)
Total 14 (2.6%) 30 (5.5%)

 

Patients at greatest risk

There are a number of groups of patients that should not use teriparatide, primarily those with an increased baseline risk of osteosarcoma, including:

  • patients with Paget's disease of the bone;
  • patients with unexplained high levels of alkaline phosphatase in the blood, which may mean the presence of Paget's disease (if you are not sure, ask your doctor);
  • children or growing young adults;
  • patients who have had radiation therapy involving the bones.

In addition, patients who have ever been diagnosed with bone cancer or other cancers that have spread (metastasized) to the bones, have a bone disease other than osteoporosis, have too much calcium in the blood (hypercalcemia), or are pregnant or nursing should not use teriparatide.

Other adverse effects

Other common adverse reactions seen with teriparatide in clinical trials include nausea, dizziness, leg cramps, and headache. Redness and swelling have also occurred at the injection site. Low blood pressure (orthostatic hypotension) that can lead to fainting has been seen with the first few doses of teriparatide. Elevations of calcium levels in both the blood and urine also have been reported.

last reviewed January 1, 2024