PMID-41021211 โ Cheng: Multi-Database Pharmacovigilance of GLP-1 Ophthalmic Risks
[DRAFT โ authored 2026-04-19. Citation web-verified 2026-04-19 against PubMed.]
Citation
Cheng X, Jiang Z, Li G, Wang J, Han F. Multi-database pharmacovigilance assessment of GLP-1 receptor agonist-related ophthalmic risks using advanced signal detection in FAERS and VigiBase. Journal of Endocrinology and Investigation. 2026;49(2):425-433. doi: 10.1007/s40618-025-02712-3. PMID: 41021211.
External URL: DOI resolver
Study Design
- Design: Multi-database disproportionality (signal-detection) pharmacovigilance analysis
- Databases: FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS) + WHO VigiBase
- Scope: Ophthalmic adverse events reported across the full GLP-1 receptor agonist class (semaglutide, liraglutide, dulaglutide, exenatide, tirzepatide)
- Method: Advanced signal-detection statistics (reporting odds ratio and related disproportionality metrics)
Key Findings
- Semaglutide: Strongest ocular signals across the class, particularly for NAION (non-arteritic anterior ischemic optic neuropathy):
- 2,878 NAION cases in VigiBase
- 2,047 NAION cases in FAERS
- Dulaglutide: Elevated rates of visual impairment and diabetic retinopathy; numerous early-onset events (โค30 days post-initiation) flagged
- Demographics: Age 45-64 years and female sex predominant in reporting
- Labeling gap: Authors note that "ocular adverse events are incompletely characterized" in current prescribing information across the class
- Triangulation context: Aligns with and extends the Hathaway cohort (2024) and Lakhani 180-country analysis (2025) โ adds volumetric disproportionality data across two large pharmacovigilance databases
Clinical Relevance
Cheng 2026 is the most recent multi-database pharmacovigilance synthesis of GLP-1 RA ocular adverse events as of publication. Core points:
- Semaglutide NAION signal is confirmed at scale โ volumetric data (thousands of reports across two databases) corroborate the Hathaway HR and Lakhani ROR findings
- Dulaglutide signal for visual impairment / diabetic retinopathy is a distinct-but-related class signal warranting monitoring
- Labeling characterization is incomplete โ a direct argument for updated prescriber education and informed consent
- Teaching implication: The NAION triangulation framework (Hathaway โ Danish/Norwegian โ Lakhani โ Cheng โ EMA/WHO) is increasingly robust; US FDA labeling-inaction divergence is now at odds with multiple independent pharmacovigilance signals
Limitations (Author-acknowledged + inherent to pharmacovigilance)
- Pharmacovigilance data is subject to reporting bias, notoriety bias (post-FDA alert and EMA action, reports can spike independent of incidence change), and confounding by indication (GLP-1 RA patients have higher metabolic/vascular baseline risk)
- Disproportionality signals are hypothesis-generating, not causal
- Heterogeneity in classification of "ophthalmic AE" across national reporting systems
Evidence Level
Level II (Oxford CEBM for pharmacovigilance disproportionality analyses) โ hypothesis-generating, complementary to cohort and RCT evidence.
Linked Peptides
Related Studies
- PMID-38958939 – Hathaway NAION Cohort โ seminal single-center cohort
- PMID-39696569 – Danish Norwegian NAION Cohort โ nationwide cohort
- PMID-40383360 – Lakhani 180 Countries GLP-1 Ocular Events โ parallel 180-country pharmacovigilance
- REG-EMA-PRAC-Semaglutide-NAION-2025 – EMA NAION Very Rare โ EMA regulatory outcome
- CONF-2025-EASD-Vilsboll-NAION โ trial-pooled conference data
Orchestrator Notes
- Citation web-verified 2026-04-19 via PubMed.
- Adds pharmacovigilance-scale volumetric evidence to the NAION triangulation framework in Lesson 5.2 and Semaglutide profile NAION section.
Tags
#research #pharmacovigilance #disproportionality-analysis #faers #vigibase #naion #ocular-safety #semaglutide #dulaglutide #evidence-level-II