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Investigational Drug Found as Effective as NSAIDs for Arthritis Pain
November 16, 1998
A recent report concludes that Searle and Pfizer's investigational drug Celebrex (celecoxib) relieves
arthritis-related pain as well as full therapeutic doses of commonly-prescribed non-steroidal
anti-inflammatory (NSAID) pain relievers.
Celebrex, a specific COX-2 inhibitor, was tested in a 12-week trial of 1,149 patients with rheumatoid
arthritis to collect data.
It was found that Celebrex was effective as the commonly-used NSAID naproxen in relieving joint
tenderness, pain, and swelling.
Authors further note that the gastrointestinal side-effects associated with use of Celebrex were
comparable to those seen in patients who received a placebo, while naproxen-treated patients
experienced significantly greater levels of such side-effects.
A separate study involving 600 arthritis patients found Celebrex to be as effective in relieving
symptoms of the condition as was the NSAID diclofenac, and that the rate of gastrointestinal
complaints was 33% higher in the diclofenac-treated group.
The findings were presented at the 62nd national meeting of the American College of Rheumatology in
San Diego (November 13, 1998).
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