July 28, 2018
Dear Friends:
Canada has taken an important first step toward keeping its citizens apprised of finasteride’s many potentially serious and persistent side effects.
In the June edition of its Health Product InfoWatch, Health Canada (Canada’s version of the US Food and Drug Administration) reported that “New information regarding the risk of muscle-related disorders has been added to the Post-Market Adverse Drug Reactions and Consumer Information sections of the Canadian product monographs for Proscar and Propecia.”
The “key messages for healthcare professionals,” as added to the Proscar and Propecia labels by Merck Canada, are:
—“Rare cases of muscle-related disorders, such as rhabdomyolysis, myopathy, myalgia, myasthenia, and creatine kinase elevation, have been reported in patients treated with finasteride.”
—“In some cases, these disorders were found to be reversible with discontinuation of finasteride therapy.”
(It seems safe to assume that if “some” reported cases of muscle-related disorders returned to normal after quitting finasteride, other cases remain persistent.)
Details on the five muscle disorders, according the Mayo Clinic, are as follows:
— Rhabdomyolysis
— Myopathy
— Myalgia
— Myasthenia
— Creatine kinase elevation
This recent finasteride label change comes one year after Health Canada’s safety review of the drug, which assessed the potential risks of serious muscle-related side effects. Based on adverse drug-reaction (ADR) reports by 11 Canadian patients, the review concluded that “the risk of serious muscle-related side effects with the use of finasteride could not be ruled out.”
We thank Health Minister Ginette Petitpas Taylor for ensuring that Health Canada is taking proper action in response to consumer-safety feedback.
Health Canada disclosed Merck Canada’s finasteride label change just one month before Germany’s Federal Institute for Drugs and Medical Devices (BfArM) dispatched a so-called Red Hand Letter to doctors and pharmacists nationwide, informing them of severe and persistent finasteride side effects.
On July 5, the BfArM warned doctors and pharmacists that:
—“Patients should be aware of the risk of sexual dysfunction (including erectile dysfunction, ejaculation disorder, and decreased libido) when starting finasteride therapy. Patients should also be informed that, based on individual patient case reports, sexual dysfunction may persist for more than 10 years after discontinuation of the therapy.”
—“Patients should also be advised that mood changes (including depressive mood, depression and suicidal thoughts) have been reported in patients treated with finasteride.”
—“On the recommendation of the European Medicines Agency, ‘anxiety’ is included as a new side effect in the specialized finasteride product information.”
In addition to Health Canada and BfArM, we have identified seven EMA members nations, as well as three nations outside Europe, that have published warnings of PFS symptoms over the past two years:
— Argentina: National Pharmacovigilance System
— Belgium: Federal Agency for Medicines and Health Products
— Croatia: Agency for Medicinal Products and Medical Devices of Croatia
— Denmark: Danish Medicines Agency
— France: National Agency for the Safety of Medicine and Health Products
— Netherlands: Dutch Medicines Evaluation Board
— New Zealand: New Zealand Medicines and Medical Devices Authority
— Poland: Office for Registration of Medicinal Products, Medical Devices and Biocidal Products
— South Korea: Korean Ministry of Food and Drug Safety (English translation of data here.)
— United Kingdom: Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency
Anyone living in the US who suffers from PFS should report his symptoms to the US Food and Drug Administration; anyone living outside the US who suffers from PFS should report his symptoms to the US Food and Drug Administration as well as to his national drug-regulatory agency, as directed on our Report Your Side Effects page.
Finally, if you or a loved one are suffering from PFS, and feeling depressed or unstable, please don’t hesitate to contact the PFS Foundation as soon as possible via our Patient Support hotline: social@pfsfoundation.org
Thank you.