Safety of gadobutrol in over 23,000 patients: the GARDIAN study, a global multicentre, prospective, non-interventional study. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • OBJECTIVES: To investigate the safety and tolerability of gadobutrol at the recommended dose in patients requiring contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging/angiography (MRI/MRA) in the routine setting. METHODS: GARDIAN prospectively enrolled 23,708 patients undergoing routine gadobutrol-enhanced MRI/MRA for approved indications at 272 study centres in Europe, Asia, North America, and Africa and monitored for adverse events. RESULTS: Median gadobutrol dose was 0.11 mmol/kg body weight. The overall incidence of adverse drug reactions (ADRs) was 0.7 % (n = 170 patients), with similar incidences in patients with renal impairment or cardiac disease, from different geographic regions and in different gadobutrol dose groups. Patients at risk for contrast media reaction had an ADR incidence of 2.5 %. Five patients (0.02 %) experienced serious adverse events, four were drug-related. One patient experienced a fatal anaphylactoid shock, assessed to be related to injection of gadobutrol. The contrast quality of gadobutrol-enhanced images was rated by treating physicians as good or excellent in 97 % cases, with similar ratings in all patient subgroups and indications. CONCLUSIONS: The GARDIAN study shows that gadobutrol at the recommended dose is well tolerated across a large, diverse patient population. KEY POINTS: • Gadobutrol at recommended dose shows low rates of adverse drug reactions • Gadobutrol demonstrates a uniform safety profile across diverse patient groups • Gadobutrol provides excellent contrast quality in routine practice.

authors

  • Prince, Martin
  • Lee, Hae Giu
  • Lee, Chang-Hee
  • Youn, Sung Won
  • Lee, In Ho
  • Yoon, Woong
  • Yang, Benqiang
  • Wang, Haiping
  • Wang, Jin
  • Shih, Tiffany Ting-Fang
  • Huang, Guo-Shu
  • Lirng, Jiing-Feng
  • Palkowitsch, Petra

publication date

  • March 9, 2016

Research

keywords

  • Contrast Media
  • Image Enhancement
  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging
  • Organometallic Compounds

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC5127858

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 84960124504

PubMed ID

  • 26960538

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 27

issue

  • 1