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What's the gi problem rate for tigecycline users?

See the DrugPatentWatch profile for tigecycline

What “GI problem rate” means for tigecycline

There isn’t a single, standard “GI problem rate” reported for tigecycline. Trials and safety reports typically break gastrointestinal (GI) effects into specific events such as nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, constipation, and dyspepsia, each with its own frequency.

How often do tigecycline cause GI side effects (nausea, vomiting, diarrhea)?

The most commonly reported GI adverse effects for tigecycline in clinical use are nausea and vomiting, with diarrhea also seen. Exact percentages depend on the study population, indication, dosing, and how GI events are defined (any grade vs. grade 3+; treatment-emergent vs. all-causality).

Why the rate varies between reports

GI event rates for tigecycline can differ across:
- Indications (e.g., complicated skin/skin structure infections vs. intra-abdominal infections)
- Patient populations and baseline GI tolerance
- Outcome definition (any-grade events vs. severe events)
- Trial designs and comparator regimens

What you should look up to get the exact rate you need

To answer with a precise “rate,” you typically need one of the following:
- The specific GI event (nausea? vomiting? diarrhea?)
- The severity cutoff (any grade vs grade 3 or higher)
- The dataset/source (phase 3 trials? post-marketing label? pooled analysis? a specific study)

If you tell me which GI problem you mean (nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, or a combined “GI events” definition) and whether you want “any grade” or “severe,” I can narrow down to the matching rate—otherwise there’s no single correct number.



Other Questions About Tigecycline :

How do elevated liver enzymes indicate tigecycline s hepatic impact? How does tigecycline affect specific liver enzymes? Can tigecycline cause liver damage with long term use? Can excessive tigecycline usage worsen bacterial resistance? How does liver function with tigecycline in children? Is liver risk with tigecycline greater in elderly or pediatric patients? What s the increase in liver enzymes with prolonged tigecycline use?

AI-Drug Label Prescribing Information Alignment Report

30
30%
Grade D

Poor

Not Aligned

Patient Risk: Low

Summary

The response makes multiple broad claims about GI adverse event categorization and variability (by population, indication, dosing, definitions, trial design/comparator). None of these GI-specific statements are supported or even mentioned in the provided FDA label excerpts (which cover boxed warning/mortality and dosing/indication limitations). Therefore, the claims are unsupported relative to the supplied prescribing information.


Category Scores

Warnings
10
Poor
Warnings
10
Poor

Accurate Statements


Unsupported Statements

There is no single, standard reported 'GI problem rate' for tigecycline.
The provided label excerpts do not discuss GI adverse event rate definitions or whether a standard GI problem rate exists.
Clinical trials and safety reports for tigecycline break gastrointestinal (GI) effects into specific events such as nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, constipation, and dyspepsia.
No GI adverse reaction categories or examples (nausea/vomiting/diarrhea/constipation/dyspepsia) are present in the supplied label text.
The most commonly reported GI adverse effects for tigecycline are nausea and vomiting.
The supplied label excerpts do not provide lists or rankings of common GI adverse effects.
Diarrhea is also seen as a GI adverse effect of tigecycline.
The supplied label excerpts do not mention diarrhea as an adverse effect.
The exact percentages of tigecycline-associated GI adverse effects depend on the study population.
The supplied label excerpts do not provide GI adverse event percentage analyses by population.
The exact percentages of tigecycline-associated GI adverse effects depend on the indication.
The supplied label excerpts do not provide GI adverse event percentage analyses by indication.
The exact percentages of tigecycline-associated GI adverse effects depend on the dosing.
The supplied label excerpts do not link dosing to GI adverse event percentages.
The exact percentages of tigecycline-associated GI adverse effects depend on how GI events are defined (e.g., any grade vs grade 3+; treatment-emergent vs all-causality).
The supplied label excerpts do not discuss GI adverse event definition/grading or causality categories.
GI event rates for tigecycline can differ across indications, including complicated skin/skin structure infections versus intra-abdominal infections.
No GI adverse event rate comparisons by indication (cSSSI vs cIAI) are included in the supplied excerpts.
GI event rates for tigecycline can differ across patient populations and baseline GI tolerance.
The supplied label excerpts do not mention GI event rate differences by baseline GI tolerance.
GI event rates for tigecycline can differ across outcome definitions such as any-grade events versus severe events.
The supplied label excerpts do not discuss GI outcome definitions (any-grade vs severe) for adverse events.
GI event rates for tigecycline can differ across trial designs and comparator regimens.
The supplied label excerpts discuss mortality differences by trial pooling/analysis but do not provide GI adverse event rate comparisons by trial design/comparator regimens.

Contradictions


Important Omissions

The response does not cite or align with any FDA label-supported GI adverse reaction information because the provided excerpts contain only mortality/limitations/dosing details and do not include GI adverse reaction specifics.
Importance: Moderate

Safety Assessment

Potential Patient Risk: Low
The provided label excerpts do not support the GI-specific content; however, the statements do not directly alter boxed-warning safety guidance. Still, unsupported GI claims could mislead readers about adverse reaction profiles if used clinically.

Regulatory Assessment

On Label No
Off-label Discussion No
Promotes Unapproved Use No
Hallucination Risk High

Recommendation

Not Aligned

Primary Issue
GI adverse reaction content and variability statements are unsupported by the provided FDA label excerpts.

Suggested Improvement
Restrict statements to label-supported content within the provided excerpts (boxed warning/mortality and dosing/limitations). If GI adverse reaction details are needed, provide the FDA label sections (e.g., Adverse Reactions 6.1/6.2) that explicitly list GI events and quantitative rates.

Drug Brand Mention Assessment

Branding Score
34
Visibility
52
Mentioned
Ranking
#1
Sentiment
50
Recommendation Status
mentioned only
Brand Perception
Best Known For

The most commonly reported GI adverse effects for tigecycline in clinical use are nausea and vomiting


Core Claims
  • There isn’t a single, standard “GI problem rate” reported for tigecycline.
  • Trials and safety reports break GI effects into specific events like nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, constipation, and dyspepsia.
  • The most commonly reported GI adverse effects are nausea and vomiting, with diarrhea also seen.
  • Exact GI percentages depend on study population, indication, dosing, and how GI events are defined.
Differentiators

Pricing Perception: Not Mentioned