Diabetes Drug's Big Catch? A Fishy Odor
The dead fish smell of a popular diabetes drug may cause some people to
discontinue its use.
Metformin, an oral drug commonly used to treat type 2 diabetes,
generally has few serious side effects, but gastrointestinal upset and nausea
are common. Although these effects have been well documented in studies,
researchers say one unique characteristic of the pills may have been overlooked
as a potential cause of the nausea: their strong fishy odor.
Researchers say adverse reactions to the smell of metformin (sold
generically and under the brand name Glucophage), have not been documented in
medical literature, but hundreds of postings to message boards on the Internet
note the strong fishy smell of the drug.
In their report, published in the Annals of Internal Medicine,
researchers describe two cases in which patients discontinued use of generic
metformin because of what they described as the nauseating smell of the drug.
Researchers say the odor, described as fishy or "like old locker
room sweat socks," varies considerably between generic versions of
metformin and seems to be more apparent with the immediate-release
formulations.
"Our cases show that the distinctive odor of metformin (independent
of other, well-known gastrointestinal adverse effects of the medication) causes
patients to stop taking the drug," write researcher Allen L. Pelletier,
MD, of the Medical College of Georgia in Augusta, and colleagues.
"Patients may report that metformin nauseates them but do not further
elaborate or distinguish this as a visceral reaction to the smell of the
drug."
Instead, when patients stop taking metformin, researchers say physicians
should ask about any reaction to the smell of the drug and try a film-coated,
extended-release formulation of metformin as an alternative.
Source: webmd.com