Guest guest Posted January 1, 2006 Report Share Posted January 1, 2006 DH: Ghostwriting is at the heart of the process. I am due to lecture today (October 28) at Grand Rounds in the Neuropsychiatric Institute in UCLA. This will be webcast. At the heart of this talk will be just this issue with some of the examples outlined in the book. Ghostwriting though is not the biggest problem. Often these writers (at the firms hired by pharmaceutical companies to write peer- reviewed articles for academic journals) will write better than most academics and they get results out quicker and will often be more honest. The key problem is lack of access to the data from these trials and against the background of this lack of data, the questions of ghostwriting, conflict of interest, and consultancies assume the importance they have. I think though journals who are worried about how to make sure authors are real authors are missing the key point. In the article you refer to the key point is not whether Dunner was an author in the usual sense of the word but the fact that the data in that article are just plain wrong. They give the impression there is no difference between placebo suicidal act rates and Paxil suicidal act rates, when in fact the raw data shows a possible up to 8-fold higher rate of suicidal acts on Paxil > > > > Happy New Year everyone > > With the New Year comes more new spin from the drug pushers. > > > > > http://www.forbes.com/lifestyle/health/feeds/hscout/2006/01/01/hscout > 529949.html > > Health > > Antidepressants Work and Don't Boost Suicide Risk: Studies > > > > > > SUNDAY, Jan. 1 (HealthDay News) -- Contrary to what has been > feared, > > the antidepressants known as serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) > are > > initially effective in as many as one-third of depressed patients > and > > don't appear to increase the risk of suicide, two new studies > claim. > > > > The reports, both of which were funded by the National Institute of > > Mental Health, appear in the January issue of the American Journal > of > > Psychiatry. > > > > The suicide findings seem to challenge a 2004 advisory by the U.S. > > Food and Drug Administration that warned that suicidal behavior may > > increase after treatment with SSRIs. However, the study did find > that > > suicide attempts were higher among teens than adults, a finding > borne > > out by other research. > > > > The first report is based on early data from the Sequenced > Treatment > > Alternatives to Relieve Depression (STAR*D) trial, the largest > study > > of its kind. This research looked at the benefits of > antidepressants > > in " real world " settings. > > > > " About a third of the patients achieved remission, " said lead > > researcher Dr. Madhukar Trivedi, director of the Mood Disorders > > Research Program and Clinic at the University of Texas Southwestern > > Medical Center, in Dallas. " An additional 10 to 15 percent > achieved a > > response. " > > > > The object of the study was to provide physicians with guidelines > for > > treating depression, Trivedi said. " The goal is to have patients > > provided with an adequate dose of medication for an adequate > time, " he > > explained. " Treatment would be tailored for each individual > patient to > > get the most benefit from treatment. " > > > > For the study, researchers looked at the results of prescribing the > > SSRI Celexa to 2,876 patients with major depression. These patients > > also had other physical and psychological problems. The researchers > > found that about a third of the patients had their depression cured > > during the first 12 weeks of treatment. > > > > In addition, another 10 percent to 15 percent of the patients > showed a > > response to the medication, or reduction of at least half their > > symptoms. For patients who did not improve, later phases of the > trial > > will use other medications or combinations of medications to see > what > > might help those who did not benefit from the drug used in the > first > > phase of the trial. > > > > " These antidepressants in routine clinical care produce outcomes > > comparable with what is seen in research settings, " Trivedi said. > > " These treatments do work in routine clinical care. There also has > to > > be careful monitoring of side effects. In addition, you have to > > monitor dose and duration of the treatment, based on the patient's > > progression. " > > > > One expert thinks this study will eventually provide guideposts for > > treating depression that physicians can follow. > > > > " This study, when it is all finally published, will give us a very > > good idea of how to treat treatment-resistant depression, and what > the > > next step is after the SSRI fails, " said Dr. L. Dunner, > director > > of the University of Washington's Center for Anxiety and > Depression. > > > > In the second study, researchers found the risk of suicide attempts > > and of successful suicides actually dropped in the weeks following > the > > start of SSRI therapy. > > > > " The risk of a serious suicide attempt in people who start taking > > antidepressant medication is, fortunately, quite low -- less than > one > > in 1,000, " said lead author Dr. Greg Simon, a researcher at the > Group > > Health ative, in Seattle. " The risk actually goes down after > > people start antidepressant medication. " > > > > The study also found no increase in suicide risk with the newer > > antidepressants, such as SSRIs, Simon added. " If anything, our data > > suggests that with the newer antidepressants there is less risk > than > > with the older antidepressants, " he said. > > > > For the study, Simons's team collected data on 65,103 patients who > had > > prescriptions for antidepressants between 1992 and 2003. > > > > The researchers found the number of suicide attempts dropped by 60 > > percent in adults in the first month after starting treatment. The > > suicide rate continued to drop in the succeeding five months. > > > > Among all the patients, there were 31 suicides in the six months > after > > starting antidepressant therapy. That rate did not change from one > > month after starting treatment or in subsequent months. > > > > However, teens had more suicide attempts than adults. Simon's group > > found that in the first six months of antidepressant treatment, the > > suicide rate was 314 attempts per 100,000 in teens, vs. 78 attempts > > per 100,000 in adults. For teens and adults, the rate was highest > in > > the month before treatment and dropped by about 60 percent after > > treatment began, the researchers found. > > > > In its 2004 warning, the FDA said people taking antidepressants > should > > be closely monitored because of the risk of suicide. > > > > " People should be closely monitored, but not because these drugs > are > > especially risky, " Simon said. " The real problem in the treatment > of > > depression is that people start medicine and the medicine has side > > effects or the medicine doesn't work right away, and they get > > discouraged and they drop out. " > > > > Dunner agreed that close monitoring is essential when prescribing > > patients antidepressants. " Monitoring depression is very > important, " > > he said. " Often people come in for treatment when they are > starting to > > get worse. " > > > > Monitoring is needed more for side effects from the drugs than to > > watch for suicidal behavior, Dunner said. " Suicide is a pretty rare > > event, " he said. " It is more important to monitor for side effects > and > > adherence to the medication. " > > > > More information > > > > The American Academy of Family Physicians can tell you more about > > antidepressants. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 1, 2006 Report Share Posted January 1, 2006 DH: Ghostwriting is at the heart of the process. I am due to lecture today (October 28) at Grand Rounds in the Neuropsychiatric Institute in UCLA. This will be webcast. At the heart of this talk will be just this issue with some of the examples outlined in the book. Ghostwriting though is not the biggest problem. Often these writers (at the firms hired by pharmaceutical companies to write peer- reviewed articles for academic journals) will write better than most academics and they get results out quicker and will often be more honest. The key problem is lack of access to the data from these trials and against the background of this lack of data, the questions of ghostwriting, conflict of interest, and consultancies assume the importance they have. I think though journals who are worried about how to make sure authors are real authors are missing the key point. In the article you refer to the key point is not whether Dunner was an author in the usual sense of the word but the fact that the data in that article are just plain wrong. They give the impression there is no difference between placebo suicidal act rates and Paxil suicidal act rates, when in fact the raw data shows a possible up to 8-fold higher rate of suicidal acts on Paxil > > > > Happy New Year everyone > > With the New Year comes more new spin from the drug pushers. > > > > > http://www.forbes.com/lifestyle/health/feeds/hscout/2006/01/01/hscout > 529949.html > > Health > > Antidepressants Work and Don't Boost Suicide Risk: Studies > > > > > > SUNDAY, Jan. 1 (HealthDay News) -- Contrary to what has been > feared, > > the antidepressants known as serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) > are > > initially effective in as many as one-third of depressed patients > and > > don't appear to increase the risk of suicide, two new studies > claim. > > > > The reports, both of which were funded by the National Institute of > > Mental Health, appear in the January issue of the American Journal > of > > Psychiatry. > > > > The suicide findings seem to challenge a 2004 advisory by the U.S. > > Food and Drug Administration that warned that suicidal behavior may > > increase after treatment with SSRIs. However, the study did find > that > > suicide attempts were higher among teens than adults, a finding > borne > > out by other research. > > > > The first report is based on early data from the Sequenced > Treatment > > Alternatives to Relieve Depression (STAR*D) trial, the largest > study > > of its kind. This research looked at the benefits of > antidepressants > > in " real world " settings. > > > > " About a third of the patients achieved remission, " said lead > > researcher Dr. Madhukar Trivedi, director of the Mood Disorders > > Research Program and Clinic at the University of Texas Southwestern > > Medical Center, in Dallas. " An additional 10 to 15 percent > achieved a > > response. " > > > > The object of the study was to provide physicians with guidelines > for > > treating depression, Trivedi said. " The goal is to have patients > > provided with an adequate dose of medication for an adequate > time, " he > > explained. " Treatment would be tailored for each individual > patient to > > get the most benefit from treatment. " > > > > For the study, researchers looked at the results of prescribing the > > SSRI Celexa to 2,876 patients with major depression. These patients > > also had other physical and psychological problems. The researchers > > found that about a third of the patients had their depression cured > > during the first 12 weeks of treatment. > > > > In addition, another 10 percent to 15 percent of the patients > showed a > > response to the medication, or reduction of at least half their > > symptoms. For patients who did not improve, later phases of the > trial > > will use other medications or combinations of medications to see > what > > might help those who did not benefit from the drug used in the > first > > phase of the trial. > > > > " These antidepressants in routine clinical care produce outcomes > > comparable with what is seen in research settings, " Trivedi said. > > " These treatments do work in routine clinical care. There also has > to > > be careful monitoring of side effects. In addition, you have to > > monitor dose and duration of the treatment, based on the patient's > > progression. " > > > > One expert thinks this study will eventually provide guideposts for > > treating depression that physicians can follow. > > > > " This study, when it is all finally published, will give us a very > > good idea of how to treat treatment-resistant depression, and what > the > > next step is after the SSRI fails, " said Dr. L. Dunner, > director > > of the University of Washington's Center for Anxiety and > Depression. > > > > In the second study, researchers found the risk of suicide attempts > > and of successful suicides actually dropped in the weeks following > the > > start of SSRI therapy. > > > > " The risk of a serious suicide attempt in people who start taking > > antidepressant medication is, fortunately, quite low -- less than > one > > in 1,000, " said lead author Dr. Greg Simon, a researcher at the > Group > > Health ative, in Seattle. " The risk actually goes down after > > people start antidepressant medication. " > > > > The study also found no increase in suicide risk with the newer > > antidepressants, such as SSRIs, Simon added. " If anything, our data > > suggests that with the newer antidepressants there is less risk > than > > with the older antidepressants, " he said. > > > > For the study, Simons's team collected data on 65,103 patients who > had > > prescriptions for antidepressants between 1992 and 2003. > > > > The researchers found the number of suicide attempts dropped by 60 > > percent in adults in the first month after starting treatment. The > > suicide rate continued to drop in the succeeding five months. > > > > Among all the patients, there were 31 suicides in the six months > after > > starting antidepressant therapy. That rate did not change from one > > month after starting treatment or in subsequent months. > > > > However, teens had more suicide attempts than adults. Simon's group > > found that in the first six months of antidepressant treatment, the > > suicide rate was 314 attempts per 100,000 in teens, vs. 78 attempts > > per 100,000 in adults. For teens and adults, the rate was highest > in > > the month before treatment and dropped by about 60 percent after > > treatment began, the researchers found. > > > > In its 2004 warning, the FDA said people taking antidepressants > should > > be closely monitored because of the risk of suicide. > > > > " People should be closely monitored, but not because these drugs > are > > especially risky, " Simon said. " The real problem in the treatment > of > > depression is that people start medicine and the medicine has side > > effects or the medicine doesn't work right away, and they get > > discouraged and they drop out. " > > > > Dunner agreed that close monitoring is essential when prescribing > > patients antidepressants. " Monitoring depression is very > important, " > > he said. " Often people come in for treatment when they are > starting to > > get worse. " > > > > Monitoring is needed more for side effects from the drugs than to > > watch for suicidal behavior, Dunner said. " Suicide is a pretty rare > > event, " he said. " It is more important to monitor for side effects > and > > adherence to the medication. " > > > > More information > > > > The American Academy of Family Physicians can tell you more about > > antidepressants. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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