Guest guest Posted January 17, 2010 Report Share Posted January 17, 2010  You have your Opinion, others have there’s and I have mine.    It is a simple known fact there is RD before going to market and it is also a very simple known fact that even after going to market other studies do continue on medications! This is why some after they hit the market get pulled or reformulated. This is what happened to Viox for example.  Also a slight change in a med dose not always mean a delay of years before it comes back to the market. The time span depends on what and how it was changed. But they must be reproved by the FDA after any change another simple known fact.     I also do not appreciate you’r trying to make it look as if I am stupid and ignorant. Your statement “I believe that there is a lack of understanding as to how things work in the pharmaceutical world†is both arrogant and insulting! You insinuate that only you have any knowledge in this area.     Now I will not have you dragging this on or insulting me here any more period. If you wish to continue to act this way take it off line! the other people here do not need it or want it! Marty  ________________________________ From: tracyminca To: Stillsdisease Sent: Sun, January 17, 2010 11:50:32 AM Subject: Re: old vs new Marty, Although you are correct on many things, in this case, I believe that there is a lack of understanding as to how things work in the pharmaceutical world. Laymen often get chronological order confused with cause and effect. Just because the medication made you sick doesn't mean that the reformulation was related to side effects. In a perfect world, drug companies would respond to our complaints, but that's not what happens in reality. Businesses do everything in order to make money. Drug companies respond to side effects based on LIABILITY. And liability equals lawsuits and loss of money. Before a drug goes to market, it has been tested (R & D) in animal trials, then clinical trials for YEARS. Therefore, if a drug has serious side effects show up after FDA approval, either that drug gets pulled or a black box warning is added (if the good it does outweighes the danger).. No company can just pull a drug and tinker with it then put it back on the shelf. Even the slightest modification requires more testing and FDA approval again. That's because if you understand pharmacology, just a tiny modification can be the difference between safety and death. To make a tiny modification, the drug needs to go back to the beginning, get retested, get new FDA approval which takes years. When we see " new " formulations of drugs show up in our drugstores, those formulations would have been in the R & D pipeline for YEARS. The most common reason for a slight modification is NOT side effects, but upcoming PATENT LOSS. If a drug company modifies a drug slightly, it extends their ability to have sole rights to that drug and prevents generic versions from coming on the market and stealing their market share of $$$. So when you see a " new and improved " it's usually because the time limit on having the sole patent has expired so the company puts out an " extended release " or something of that sort to extend their patent and keep their market share. Money. So just because a newer version appeared after your incident with the medication does NOT mean that the reformulation had anything to do with what happened to you. Yes, drug companies do take reports on serious side effects, BUT.....changing the formula for a medication is a huge deal. If you tell me the medication, I'm sure I can find information as to the reason for the change in formulation. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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