Guest guest Posted October 4, 2004 Report Share Posted October 4, 2004 This is a very good article, a, and I hope all members take the time to read it. The approval process is flawed, and it's hard to take a drug off the market once it's out there. The pharmaceutical companies should be distanced from the FDA. How can the FDA be impartial if it receives funding from the drug manufacturers? Why is so much data from trials suppressed? Even if patients are foolish enough to believe that slick advertising, why do doctors fall for it, too? Or why do they cave in so easily to patient pressure? I know of so many people (outside of this group) who have been inappropriately prescribed one of the COX-2s. In the end, we all pay for that, one way or another. I know I must sound like a broken record, but the FDA and their adverse drug reaction reporting system needs to be revamped pronto! I'll tell you where to go! Mayo Clinic in Rochester http://www.mayoclinic.org/rochester s Hopkins Medicine http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org [ ] Rofecoxib withdrawal sparks criticism of FDA and overaggressivemarketing of coxibs > > Rofecoxib withdrawal sparks criticism of FDA and overaggressive marketing of > coxibs > > Oct 4, 2004 Zosia Chustecka > > The withdrawal of rofecoxib (Vioxx, Merck & Co) has sparked questions about > the way that the FDA handled the issue as well as the way this group of > drugs was marketed. > > Some of the sharpest criticism comes from cardiologist Dr Topol > (Cleveland Clinic, OH), who was one of the first to raise concerns over the > cardiovascular risk with rofecoxib. " Good riddance to a bad drug, " he snipes > in an editorial in the New York Times [1]. " After 3 years of denying that > the arthritis drug Vioxx could induce heart attacks and strokes, this week > Merck bowed to reality. " > > > Our 2 most common deadly diseases should not be caused by a drug. > > > > Topol hits out at both the company and the FDA, accusing both of passivity > in the face of mounting evidence. " Despite studies showing the magnitude of > the public-health problem, for several years Merck did nothing to > investigate, " he charges, pointing out that at the same time the company was > spending vast amounts on direct-to-consumer advertising for the product. > " The FDA could have forced Merck to do the appropriate research studies, but > instead it was a bystander, " he adds. > > " As the Vioxx debacle shows, we have a long way to go in this country to get > on track with prescription medications, " Topol thunders in the editorial. > " Most important, we need a strong regulatory agency to compel pharmaceutical > companies to do the proper studies and force these companies to stop > direct-to-consumer advertising unless a drug has major benefits for patients > and negligible increased risk of heart attacks and strokes. Our 2 most > common deadly diseases should not be caused by a drug. " > Could the FDA have acted sooner, done more? > > Others have also lashed out at the FDA, pointing out that there have been a > number of signals suggesting an increased cardiovascular risk with the drug > over the past few years. The Newark Star-Ledger found several critics [2]. > > " The FDA was being inappropriately passive, " says Dr Jerry Avron (Harvard > Medical School, Boston, MA), author of the recently published book Powerful > Medicines: The Benefits, Risks, and Costs Of Prescription Drugs. He suggests > that the US Congress should consider " a separate government agency > responsible for looking at safety problems of drugs that have been > approved. " > > " The FDA has had a pattern of not being able to act quickly when products > are already on the market, " says Dr Wayne Ray (Vanderbilt University, > Nashville, TN). " Everyone thinks that the FDA is minding the store, but in > fact, they are not. " Ray led one of the studies that found an increased > cardiovascular risk, which was published in 2002. > > But the first inkling of risk came from the company-sponsored VIGOR trial, > published in 2000, shortly after the product was launched. These and other > data were considered by an FDA advisory meeting in 2001, and a warning about > cardiovascular risks was added to rofecoxib's label in 2002. In Europe, > warnings were added in 2003. > > > Everyone thinks that the FDA is minding the store, but in fact, they are > not. > > > > Back in 2000, there were enough data to suggest that the FDA could have > ordered Merck to conduct an extensive clinical trial to look specifically at > safety issues, says Dr Alistair Wood (Vanderbilt University). He told the > Star-Ledger he was " confused " as to why there had only been a warning and > says there should be an investigation into the agency's handling of this > product. " We are dealing with powerful companies and powerful interests, and > we need to know what happened, " Wood says. " The public deserves to have an > open and proper discussion and an inquiry that involves people other than > the interested parties. " > > The FDA argues thatuntil last weekthe data were inconclusive. " No drug is > fully safe, " says FDA spokesperson Crystal Rice. " Our job is to > appropriately balance our decisions based on the risk/benefit profile for a > drug and the societal need and desire for new drugs and a range of options > to treat diseases. " > > Even one of the cardiologists who highlighted the CV concerns, Dr > Nissen (Cleveland Clinic), comes to the agency's defense. " The FDA did the > best it could. I would be cautious laying the blame at the feet of the FDA, " > he tells the Star-Ledger. " We have a system of adverse-event surveillance > that is weak. I don't know if the FDA can force companies to do clinical > trials. There is a limited amount that the FDA can do under current law. " > > Rice reiterates this point. " The agency can only asknot ordercompanies to do > further studies on drugs already approved, " she says in an Associated Press > article that was syndicated to several newspapers, including the Houston > Chronicle [3]. But this article also quotes Wood as saying that " a very > quick, very cheap study would have determined the risk had the FDA taken a > tougher stance at the first sign of trouble. " > > In an interview with Business Week, Nissen recalls how he was asked to > evaluate rofecoxib when it came up for approval 5 years ago [4]. Although he > was concerned then about cardiovascular risks, he says there was no reason > for the FDA to reject it at that time. " This was an unusual and subtle > enough signal that it would have been premature to act on it when we first > noticed it. Even in August 2001, when we published our first report on the > risks, it was highly speculative. We didn't have hard data. We had some soft > data and suspicions about the mechanism of action. We could have just as > easily been wrong. " > > Even now, he says, " we don't know exactly why " rofecoxib poses a > cardiovascular risk. One theory is that it affects the balance between > thromboxane and prostacyclin. Aspirin reduces the levels of thromboxane > without affecting prostacyclin, while rofecoxib may be raising the levels of > thromboxane and not affecting prostacyclin, he explains. " Celecoxib > [Celebrex, Pfizer] may work slightly differently. We haven't seen the heart > risks with Celebrex, and it has been on the market for about as long as > Vioxx. " He doesn't think that celecoxib will now receive a lot of additional > scrutinybut any new selective COX-2 inhibitor should. > > " We also need a more robust postapproval surveillance system to keep track > of adverse events with new drugs, " Nissen says. " Studies have found that > only 1% to 10% of serious adverse events with drugs on the market are > actually reported. So the FDA is making decisions on inadequate data now. " > Overaggressive marketing and misleading adverts > > Sharp criticism has also been leveled at the way in which rofecoxib and > other similar drugs have been marketed. Direct-to-consumer advertising > included sophisticated mass-media campaigns and television advertisements, > often featuring celebrity endorsements. > > > Some patients came and asked for it after seeing Dorothy Hamill skating > on TV. > > > > " These agents have been the subject of absolutely intensive, unrelenting > marketing, " says Dr Wofsy (University of California, San Francisco), > current president of the American College of Rheumatology, in Time [5]. > " Even if you don't have arthritis, you can probably hum the Celebrex jingle > or Vioxx's 'It's a beautiful morning,' " the magazine adds. > > " I believe they have been overaggressively marketed, " Dr Greenwald, > chief of rheumatology at Long Island Jewish Medical Center in New Hyde Park, > NY, tells Newsday [6]. Referring to a rofecoxib advertisement featuring a > former Olympic ice skater, he says: " Some patients came and asked for it > after seeing Dorothy Hamill skating on TV. " Referring to the nonselective > nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), he adds: " I believe that > manynot allcould be treated with the old drugs. " > > Misleading advertisements are one of the problems, says a Los Angeles Times > editorial about the withdrawal [7]. Vioxx and its rival celecoxib have been > " touted as 'super aspirins' in numerous TV commercials that have downplayed > their known cardiovascular risks. Such commercials show how far the FDA has > slipped in enforcing its own rules. " > > The editorial also maintains that rofecoxib's increased risk of a heart > attack compared with older, equally effective, arthritis treatments such as > ibuprofen and naproxen has been known since 2000. " So why is Merck is > recalling the drug now? One can only speculate, but it may have less to do > with side effects outweighing benefits than with legal liabilities > outweighing profits. " > > One of the lawsuits that were filed the day after the withdrawal involves a > young woman who died of a heart attack after taking rofecoxib for 2 years, > the Associated Press reports [8]. Filed by her mother through Missouri > lawyer McClain, the lawsuit claims that Merck knew of the risks long > before its announcement last week. It also claims the doctor who prescribed > the drug failed to diagnose the severity of her daughter's heart condition > and prescribed rofecoxib despite her medical history. > > > There is this newer-is-better mentality, and this is why we can't afford > healthcare. > > > > The Washing Post highlights the intense promotional efforts directed at > physicians, reporting that an IMS Health survey estimated that Merck spent > $500 million in 2003 promoting rofecoxib through advertisements in medical > journals, free samples, and salespeople's visits to doctors' offices [9]. It > also cites another IMS survey, which found that 52% of physicians were > willing to write a prescription for a COX-2 inhibitor if patients requested > them and needed painkillers. > > " When a patient comes in and wants something, there is a desire to serve > them, " comments Wofsy. " There is a desire on the part of physicians, as > there is on anyone else who provides a service, to keep the customer happy. " > > " One of the things that drove their overuse was the widespread perception, > even among doctors, that they were somehow better pain relievers, and they > never really were, " Avron tells the Washington Post. The newspaper says the > coxibs may have worked better in some patients, as individuals vary in their > individual response to painkiller, but it also suggests that the novelty > coxibs may have produced " something analogous to a placebo effect that > enhanced their real effect. " > > The fact that they were new " alone holds great sway with American consumers > and physicians, " it asserts. " They were supposed to be safer, another > natural appeal. Perhaps most important, they had the cachet of being an > expensive prescription medicine in a world of mundane over-the-counter > generics. " > > One of the consequences of the " Vioxx debacle " is that American society may > wonder whether expensive new drugspart pharmaceutical, part fetish objectare > worth the money, the Washington Post comments. Avron says the answer is > generally no. The use of Vioxx by people who did not need the modest amount > of stomach protection it offered " has cost billions of dollars that could > have been better used for other purposes in our healthcare system, " he says. > " There is this newer-is-better mentality, and this is why we can't afford > healthcare. " > > > Forum > > For further discussions of this topic, please go to Topic: Reactions to > rofecoxib withdrawal in the Forum. > > > Sources > > 1. Topol EJ. Good riddance to a bad drug. New York Times, October 2, > 2004; Available at: > 2. http://www.nytimes.comCohen R and Silverman E. What's next for drug > regulation. Star-Ledger, October 3, 2004; Available at: > 3. > http://www.nj.com/search/index.ssf?/base/business-0/1096777910132280.xml?sta > rledger?bpha LA. Removal of Vioxx prompts questions about drug tests. > Houston Chronicle October 2, 2004; Available at: > 4. http://www.chron.comO'Connell, P, ed. Early twinges over Vioxx. > Business Week October 1, 2004; Available at: > 5. http://www.businessweek.comGorman C. A painful mistake. Time October > 4, 2004; Available at: > 6. http://www.time.comRabin R. Many choices beyond Vioxx. Newsday > October 2, 2004; Available at: > 7. http://www.newsday.comLos Angeles Times editorial. A Symptom of FDA > laxity. Los Angeles Times October 1, 2004; Available at: > 8. http://www.latimes.comAssociated Press. Vioxx maker sued over woman's > death. New York Times October 3, 2004; Available at: > 9. http://www.nytimes.comBrown D. Promise and peril of Vioxx cast harsher > light on new drugs. Washington Post October 3, 2004; Available at: > http://washingtonpost.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 4, 2004 Report Share Posted October 4, 2004 This is a very good article, a, and I hope all members take the time to read it. The approval process is flawed, and it's hard to take a drug off the market once it's out there. The pharmaceutical companies should be distanced from the FDA. How can the FDA be impartial if it receives funding from the drug manufacturers? Why is so much data from trials suppressed? Even if patients are foolish enough to believe that slick advertising, why do doctors fall for it, too? Or why do they cave in so easily to patient pressure? I know of so many people (outside of this group) who have been inappropriately prescribed one of the COX-2s. In the end, we all pay for that, one way or another. I know I must sound like a broken record, but the FDA and their adverse drug reaction reporting system needs to be revamped pronto! I'll tell you where to go! Mayo Clinic in Rochester http://www.mayoclinic.org/rochester s Hopkins Medicine http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org [ ] Rofecoxib withdrawal sparks criticism of FDA and overaggressivemarketing of coxibs > > Rofecoxib withdrawal sparks criticism of FDA and overaggressive marketing of > coxibs > > Oct 4, 2004 Zosia Chustecka > > The withdrawal of rofecoxib (Vioxx, Merck & Co) has sparked questions about > the way that the FDA handled the issue as well as the way this group of > drugs was marketed. > > Some of the sharpest criticism comes from cardiologist Dr Topol > (Cleveland Clinic, OH), who was one of the first to raise concerns over the > cardiovascular risk with rofecoxib. " Good riddance to a bad drug, " he snipes > in an editorial in the New York Times [1]. " After 3 years of denying that > the arthritis drug Vioxx could induce heart attacks and strokes, this week > Merck bowed to reality. " > > > Our 2 most common deadly diseases should not be caused by a drug. > > > > Topol hits out at both the company and the FDA, accusing both of passivity > in the face of mounting evidence. " Despite studies showing the magnitude of > the public-health problem, for several years Merck did nothing to > investigate, " he charges, pointing out that at the same time the company was > spending vast amounts on direct-to-consumer advertising for the product. > " The FDA could have forced Merck to do the appropriate research studies, but > instead it was a bystander, " he adds. > > " As the Vioxx debacle shows, we have a long way to go in this country to get > on track with prescription medications, " Topol thunders in the editorial. > " Most important, we need a strong regulatory agency to compel pharmaceutical > companies to do the proper studies and force these companies to stop > direct-to-consumer advertising unless a drug has major benefits for patients > and negligible increased risk of heart attacks and strokes. Our 2 most > common deadly diseases should not be caused by a drug. " > Could the FDA have acted sooner, done more? > > Others have also lashed out at the FDA, pointing out that there have been a > number of signals suggesting an increased cardiovascular risk with the drug > over the past few years. The Newark Star-Ledger found several critics [2]. > > " The FDA was being inappropriately passive, " says Dr Jerry Avron (Harvard > Medical School, Boston, MA), author of the recently published book Powerful > Medicines: The Benefits, Risks, and Costs Of Prescription Drugs. He suggests > that the US Congress should consider " a separate government agency > responsible for looking at safety problems of drugs that have been > approved. " > > " The FDA has had a pattern of not being able to act quickly when products > are already on the market, " says Dr Wayne Ray (Vanderbilt University, > Nashville, TN). " Everyone thinks that the FDA is minding the store, but in > fact, they are not. " Ray led one of the studies that found an increased > cardiovascular risk, which was published in 2002. > > But the first inkling of risk came from the company-sponsored VIGOR trial, > published in 2000, shortly after the product was launched. These and other > data were considered by an FDA advisory meeting in 2001, and a warning about > cardiovascular risks was added to rofecoxib's label in 2002. In Europe, > warnings were added in 2003. > > > Everyone thinks that the FDA is minding the store, but in fact, they are > not. > > > > Back in 2000, there were enough data to suggest that the FDA could have > ordered Merck to conduct an extensive clinical trial to look specifically at > safety issues, says Dr Alistair Wood (Vanderbilt University). He told the > Star-Ledger he was " confused " as to why there had only been a warning and > says there should be an investigation into the agency's handling of this > product. " We are dealing with powerful companies and powerful interests, and > we need to know what happened, " Wood says. " The public deserves to have an > open and proper discussion and an inquiry that involves people other than > the interested parties. " > > The FDA argues thatuntil last weekthe data were inconclusive. " No drug is > fully safe, " says FDA spokesperson Crystal Rice. " Our job is to > appropriately balance our decisions based on the risk/benefit profile for a > drug and the societal need and desire for new drugs and a range of options > to treat diseases. " > > Even one of the cardiologists who highlighted the CV concerns, Dr > Nissen (Cleveland Clinic), comes to the agency's defense. " The FDA did the > best it could. I would be cautious laying the blame at the feet of the FDA, " > he tells the Star-Ledger. " We have a system of adverse-event surveillance > that is weak. I don't know if the FDA can force companies to do clinical > trials. There is a limited amount that the FDA can do under current law. " > > Rice reiterates this point. " The agency can only asknot ordercompanies to do > further studies on drugs already approved, " she says in an Associated Press > article that was syndicated to several newspapers, including the Houston > Chronicle [3]. But this article also quotes Wood as saying that " a very > quick, very cheap study would have determined the risk had the FDA taken a > tougher stance at the first sign of trouble. " > > In an interview with Business Week, Nissen recalls how he was asked to > evaluate rofecoxib when it came up for approval 5 years ago [4]. Although he > was concerned then about cardiovascular risks, he says there was no reason > for the FDA to reject it at that time. " This was an unusual and subtle > enough signal that it would have been premature to act on it when we first > noticed it. Even in August 2001, when we published our first report on the > risks, it was highly speculative. We didn't have hard data. We had some soft > data and suspicions about the mechanism of action. We could have just as > easily been wrong. " > > Even now, he says, " we don't know exactly why " rofecoxib poses a > cardiovascular risk. One theory is that it affects the balance between > thromboxane and prostacyclin. Aspirin reduces the levels of thromboxane > without affecting prostacyclin, while rofecoxib may be raising the levels of > thromboxane and not affecting prostacyclin, he explains. " Celecoxib > [Celebrex, Pfizer] may work slightly differently. We haven't seen the heart > risks with Celebrex, and it has been on the market for about as long as > Vioxx. " He doesn't think that celecoxib will now receive a lot of additional > scrutinybut any new selective COX-2 inhibitor should. > > " We also need a more robust postapproval surveillance system to keep track > of adverse events with new drugs, " Nissen says. " Studies have found that > only 1% to 10% of serious adverse events with drugs on the market are > actually reported. So the FDA is making decisions on inadequate data now. " > Overaggressive marketing and misleading adverts > > Sharp criticism has also been leveled at the way in which rofecoxib and > other similar drugs have been marketed. Direct-to-consumer advertising > included sophisticated mass-media campaigns and television advertisements, > often featuring celebrity endorsements. > > > Some patients came and asked for it after seeing Dorothy Hamill skating > on TV. > > > > " These agents have been the subject of absolutely intensive, unrelenting > marketing, " says Dr Wofsy (University of California, San Francisco), > current president of the American College of Rheumatology, in Time [5]. > " Even if you don't have arthritis, you can probably hum the Celebrex jingle > or Vioxx's 'It's a beautiful morning,' " the magazine adds. > > " I believe they have been overaggressively marketed, " Dr Greenwald, > chief of rheumatology at Long Island Jewish Medical Center in New Hyde Park, > NY, tells Newsday [6]. Referring to a rofecoxib advertisement featuring a > former Olympic ice skater, he says: " Some patients came and asked for it > after seeing Dorothy Hamill skating on TV. " Referring to the nonselective > nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), he adds: " I believe that > manynot allcould be treated with the old drugs. " > > Misleading advertisements are one of the problems, says a Los Angeles Times > editorial about the withdrawal [7]. Vioxx and its rival celecoxib have been > " touted as 'super aspirins' in numerous TV commercials that have downplayed > their known cardiovascular risks. Such commercials show how far the FDA has > slipped in enforcing its own rules. " > > The editorial also maintains that rofecoxib's increased risk of a heart > attack compared with older, equally effective, arthritis treatments such as > ibuprofen and naproxen has been known since 2000. " So why is Merck is > recalling the drug now? One can only speculate, but it may have less to do > with side effects outweighing benefits than with legal liabilities > outweighing profits. " > > One of the lawsuits that were filed the day after the withdrawal involves a > young woman who died of a heart attack after taking rofecoxib for 2 years, > the Associated Press reports [8]. Filed by her mother through Missouri > lawyer McClain, the lawsuit claims that Merck knew of the risks long > before its announcement last week. It also claims the doctor who prescribed > the drug failed to diagnose the severity of her daughter's heart condition > and prescribed rofecoxib despite her medical history. > > > There is this newer-is-better mentality, and this is why we can't afford > healthcare. > > > > The Washing Post highlights the intense promotional efforts directed at > physicians, reporting that an IMS Health survey estimated that Merck spent > $500 million in 2003 promoting rofecoxib through advertisements in medical > journals, free samples, and salespeople's visits to doctors' offices [9]. It > also cites another IMS survey, which found that 52% of physicians were > willing to write a prescription for a COX-2 inhibitor if patients requested > them and needed painkillers. > > " When a patient comes in and wants something, there is a desire to serve > them, " comments Wofsy. " There is a desire on the part of physicians, as > there is on anyone else who provides a service, to keep the customer happy. " > > " One of the things that drove their overuse was the widespread perception, > even among doctors, that they were somehow better pain relievers, and they > never really were, " Avron tells the Washington Post. The newspaper says the > coxibs may have worked better in some patients, as individuals vary in their > individual response to painkiller, but it also suggests that the novelty > coxibs may have produced " something analogous to a placebo effect that > enhanced their real effect. " > > The fact that they were new " alone holds great sway with American consumers > and physicians, " it asserts. " They were supposed to be safer, another > natural appeal. Perhaps most important, they had the cachet of being an > expensive prescription medicine in a world of mundane over-the-counter > generics. " > > One of the consequences of the " Vioxx debacle " is that American society may > wonder whether expensive new drugspart pharmaceutical, part fetish objectare > worth the money, the Washington Post comments. Avron says the answer is > generally no. The use of Vioxx by people who did not need the modest amount > of stomach protection it offered " has cost billions of dollars that could > have been better used for other purposes in our healthcare system, " he says. > " There is this newer-is-better mentality, and this is why we can't afford > healthcare. " > > > Forum > > For further discussions of this topic, please go to Topic: Reactions to > rofecoxib withdrawal in the Forum. > > > Sources > > 1. Topol EJ. Good riddance to a bad drug. New York Times, October 2, > 2004; Available at: > 2. http://www.nytimes.comCohen R and Silverman E. What's next for drug > regulation. Star-Ledger, October 3, 2004; Available at: > 3. > http://www.nj.com/search/index.ssf?/base/business-0/1096777910132280.xml?sta > rledger?bpha LA. Removal of Vioxx prompts questions about drug tests. > Houston Chronicle October 2, 2004; Available at: > 4. http://www.chron.comO'Connell, P, ed. Early twinges over Vioxx. > Business Week October 1, 2004; Available at: > 5. http://www.businessweek.comGorman C. A painful mistake. Time October > 4, 2004; Available at: > 6. http://www.time.comRabin R. Many choices beyond Vioxx. Newsday > October 2, 2004; Available at: > 7. http://www.newsday.comLos Angeles Times editorial. A Symptom of FDA > laxity. Los Angeles Times October 1, 2004; Available at: > 8. http://www.latimes.comAssociated Press. Vioxx maker sued over woman's > death. New York Times October 3, 2004; Available at: > 9. http://www.nytimes.comBrown D. Promise and peril of Vioxx cast harsher > light on new drugs. Washington Post October 3, 2004; Available at: > http://washingtonpost.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 5, 2004 Report Share Posted October 5, 2004 Personally , I think direct drug marketing to the consumer should once again be illegal. The billions spent on marketing drives the costs up as well as creates a burden on doctors faced with patient demanding new drugs. We're both broken records when it comes to this topic. Our doctors train at medical schools funded by pharmaceuticals so it's not surprising that they fall for their slick advertising. I've lost so much faith in the FDA's ability to protect us from poorly run drug trials. Until they are required to reveal ALL data from trials, we will continue to have people suffering serious adverse side effects. How can we even make an educated decision to take medications when we don't have all the data? a > > This is a very good article, a, and I hope all members take the time > to read it. > > The approval process is flawed, and it's hard to take a drug off the > market once it's out there. > > The pharmaceutical companies should be distanced from the FDA. How can > the FDA be impartial if it receives funding from the drug manufacturers? > Why is so much data from trials suppressed? > > Even if patients are foolish enough to believe that slick advertising, > why do doctors fall for it, too? Or why do they cave in so easily to > patient pressure? I know of so many people (outside of this group) who > have been inappropriately prescribed one of the COX-2s. In the end, we > all pay for that, one way or another. > > I know I must sound like a broken record, but the FDA and their adverse > drug reaction reporting system needs to be revamped pronto! > > > > > I'll tell you where to go! > > Mayo Clinic in Rochester > http://www.mayoclinic.org/rochester > > s Hopkins Medicine > http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org > > > [ ] Rofecoxib withdrawal sparks criticism of FDA and > overaggressivemarketing of coxibs > > >> >> Rofecoxib withdrawal sparks criticism of FDA and overaggressive > marketing of >> coxibs >> >> Oct 4, 2004 Zosia Chustecka >> >> The withdrawal of rofecoxib (Vioxx, Merck & Co) has sparked questions > about >> the way that the FDA handled the issue as well as the way this group > of >> drugs was marketed. >> >> Some of the sharpest criticism comes from cardiologist Dr Topol >> (Cleveland Clinic, OH), who was one of the first to raise concerns > over the >> cardiovascular risk with rofecoxib. " Good riddance to a bad drug, " he > snipes >> in an editorial in the New York Times [1]. " After 3 years of denying > that >> the arthritis drug Vioxx could induce heart attacks and strokes, this > week >> Merck bowed to reality. " >> >> >> Our 2 most common deadly diseases should not be caused by a drug. >> >> >> >> Topol hits out at both the company and the FDA, accusing both of > passivity >> in the face of mounting evidence. " Despite studies showing the > magnitude of >> the public-health problem, for several years Merck did nothing to >> investigate, " he charges, pointing out that at the same time the > company was >> spending vast amounts on direct-to-consumer advertising for the > product. >> " The FDA could have forced Merck to do the appropriate research > studies, but >> instead it was a bystander, " he adds. >> >> " As the Vioxx debacle shows, we have a long way to go in this country > to get >> on track with prescription medications, " Topol thunders in the > editorial. >> " Most important, we need a strong regulatory agency to compel > pharmaceutical >> companies to do the proper studies and force these companies to stop >> direct-to-consumer advertising unless a drug has major benefits for > patients >> and negligible increased risk of heart attacks and strokes. Our 2 most >> common deadly diseases should not be caused by a drug. " >> Could the FDA have acted sooner, done more? >> >> Others have also lashed out at the FDA, pointing out that there have > been a >> number of signals suggesting an increased cardiovascular risk with the > drug >> over the past few years. The Newark Star-Ledger found several critics > [2]. >> >> " The FDA was being inappropriately passive, " says Dr Jerry Avron > (Harvard >> Medical School, Boston, MA), author of the recently published book > Powerful >> Medicines: The Benefits, Risks, and Costs Of Prescription Drugs. He > suggests >> that the US Congress should consider " a separate government agency >> responsible for looking at safety problems of drugs that have been >> approved. " >> >> " The FDA has had a pattern of not being able to act quickly when > products >> are already on the market, " says Dr Wayne Ray (Vanderbilt University, >> Nashville, TN). " Everyone thinks that the FDA is minding the store, > but in >> fact, they are not. " Ray led one of the studies that found an > increased >> cardiovascular risk, which was published in 2002. >> >> But the first inkling of risk came from the company-sponsored VIGOR > trial, >> published in 2000, shortly after the product was launched. These and > other >> data were considered by an FDA advisory meeting in 2001, and a warning > about >> cardiovascular risks was added to rofecoxib's label in 2002. In > Europe, >> warnings were added in 2003. >> >> >> Everyone thinks that the FDA is minding the store, but in fact, > they are >> not. >> >> >> >> Back in 2000, there were enough data to suggest that the FDA could > have >> ordered Merck to conduct an extensive clinical trial to look > specifically at >> safety issues, says Dr Alistair Wood (Vanderbilt University). He told > the >> Star-Ledger he was " confused " as to why there had only been a warning > and >> says there should be an investigation into the agency's handling of > this >> product. " We are dealing with powerful companies and powerful > interests, and >> we need to know what happened, " Wood says. " The public deserves to > have an >> open and proper discussion and an inquiry that involves people other > than >> the interested parties. " >> >> The FDA argues thatuntil last weekthe data were inconclusive. " No drug > is >> fully safe, " says FDA spokesperson Crystal Rice. " Our job is to >> appropriately balance our decisions based on the risk/benefit profile > for a >> drug and the societal need and desire for new drugs and a range of > options >> to treat diseases. " >> >> Even one of the cardiologists who highlighted the CV concerns, Dr > >> Nissen (Cleveland Clinic), comes to the agency's defense. " The FDA did > the >> best it could. I would be cautious laying the blame at the feet of the > FDA, " >> he tells the Star-Ledger. " We have a system of adverse-event > surveillance >> that is weak. I don't know if the FDA can force companies to do > clinical >> trials. There is a limited amount that the FDA can do under current > law. " >> >> Rice reiterates this point. " The agency can only asknot ordercompanies > to do >> further studies on drugs already approved, " she says in an Associated > Press >> article that was syndicated to several newspapers, including the > Houston >> Chronicle [3]. But this article also quotes Wood as saying that " a > very >> quick, very cheap study would have determined the risk had the FDA > taken a >> tougher stance at the first sign of trouble. " >> >> In an interview with Business Week, Nissen recalls how he was asked to >> evaluate rofecoxib when it came up for approval 5 years ago [4]. > Although he >> was concerned then about cardiovascular risks, he says there was no > reason >> for the FDA to reject it at that time. " This was an unusual and subtle >> enough signal that it would have been premature to act on it when we > first >> noticed it. Even in August 2001, when we published our first report on > the >> risks, it was highly speculative. We didn't have hard data. We had > some soft >> data and suspicions about the mechanism of action. We could have just > as >> easily been wrong. " >> >> Even now, he says, " we don't know exactly why " rofecoxib poses a >> cardiovascular risk. One theory is that it affects the balance between >> thromboxane and prostacyclin. Aspirin reduces the levels of > thromboxane >> without affecting prostacyclin, while rofecoxib may be raising the > levels of >> thromboxane and not affecting prostacyclin, he explains. " Celecoxib >> [Celebrex, Pfizer] may work slightly differently. We haven't seen the > heart >> risks with Celebrex, and it has been on the market for about as long > as >> Vioxx. " He doesn't think that celecoxib will now receive a lot of > additional >> scrutinybut any new selective COX-2 inhibitor should. >> >> " We also need a more robust postapproval surveillance system to keep > track >> of adverse events with new drugs, " Nissen says. " Studies have found > that >> only 1% to 10% of serious adverse events with drugs on the market are >> actually reported. So the FDA is making decisions on inadequate data > now. " >> Overaggressive marketing and misleading adverts >> >> Sharp criticism has also been leveled at the way in which rofecoxib > and >> other similar drugs have been marketed. Direct-to-consumer advertising >> included sophisticated mass-media campaigns and television > advertisements, >> often featuring celebrity endorsements. >> >> >> Some patients came and asked for it after seeing Dorothy Hamill > skating >> on TV. >> >> >> >> " These agents have been the subject of absolutely intensive, > unrelenting >> marketing, " says Dr Wofsy (University of California, San > Francisco), >> current president of the American College of Rheumatology, in Time > [5]. >> " Even if you don't have arthritis, you can probably hum the Celebrex > jingle >> or Vioxx's 'It's a beautiful morning,' " the magazine adds. >> >> " I believe they have been overaggressively marketed, " Dr > Greenwald, >> chief of rheumatology at Long Island Jewish Medical Center in New Hyde > Park, >> NY, tells Newsday [6]. Referring to a rofecoxib advertisement > featuring a >> former Olympic ice skater, he says: " Some patients came and asked for > it >> after seeing Dorothy Hamill skating on TV. " Referring to the > nonselective >> nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), he adds: " I believe > that >> manynot allcould be treated with the old drugs. " >> >> Misleading advertisements are one of the problems, says a Los Angeles > Times >> editorial about the withdrawal [7]. Vioxx and its rival celecoxib have > been >> " touted as 'super aspirins' in numerous TV commercials that have > downplayed >> their known cardiovascular risks. Such commercials show how far the > FDA has >> slipped in enforcing its own rules. " >> >> The editorial also maintains that rofecoxib's increased risk of a > heart >> attack compared with older, equally effective, arthritis treatments > such as >> ibuprofen and naproxen has been known since 2000. " So why is Merck is >> recalling the drug now? One can only speculate, but it may have less > to do >> with side effects outweighing benefits than with legal liabilities >> outweighing profits. " >> >> One of the lawsuits that were filed the day after the withdrawal > involves a >> young woman who died of a heart attack after taking rofecoxib for 2 > years, >> the Associated Press reports [8]. Filed by her mother through Missouri >> lawyer McClain, the lawsuit claims that Merck knew of the > risks long >> before its announcement last week. It also claims the doctor who > prescribed >> the drug failed to diagnose the severity of her daughter's heart > condition >> and prescribed rofecoxib despite her medical history. >> >> >> There is this newer-is-better mentality, and this is why we can't > afford >> healthcare. >> >> >> >> The Washing Post highlights the intense promotional efforts directed > at >> physicians, reporting that an IMS Health survey estimated that Merck > spent >> $500 million in 2003 promoting rofecoxib through advertisements in > medical >> journals, free samples, and salespeople's visits to doctors' offices > [9]. It >> also cites another IMS survey, which found that 52% of physicians were >> willing to write a prescription for a COX-2 inhibitor if patients > requested >> them and needed painkillers. >> >> " When a patient comes in and wants something, there is a desire to > serve >> them, " comments Wofsy. " There is a desire on the part of physicians, > as >> there is on anyone else who provides a service, to keep the customer > happy. " >> >> " One of the things that drove their overuse was the widespread > perception, >> even among doctors, that they were somehow better pain relievers, and > they >> never really were, " Avron tells the Washington Post. The newspaper > says the >> coxibs may have worked better in some patients, as individuals vary in > their >> individual response to painkiller, but it also suggests that the > novelty >> coxibs may have produced " something analogous to a placebo effect that >> enhanced their real effect. " >> >> The fact that they were new " alone holds great sway with American > consumers >> and physicians, " it asserts. " They were supposed to be safer, another >> natural appeal. Perhaps most important, they had the cachet of being > an >> expensive prescription medicine in a world of mundane over-the-counter >> generics. " >> >> One of the consequences of the " Vioxx debacle " is that American > society may >> wonder whether expensive new drugspart pharmaceutical, part fetish > objectare >> worth the money, the Washington Post comments. Avron says the answer > is >> generally no. The use of Vioxx by people who did not need the modest > amount >> of stomach protection it offered " has cost billions of dollars that > could >> have been better used for other purposes in our healthcare system, " he > says. >> " There is this newer-is-better mentality, and this is why we can't > afford >> healthcare. " >> >> >> Forum >> >> For further discussions of this topic, please go to Topic: Reactions > to >> rofecoxib withdrawal in the Forum. >> >> >> Sources >> >> 1. Topol EJ. Good riddance to a bad drug. New York Times, October > 2, >> 2004; Available at: >> 2. http://www.nytimes.comCohen R and Silverman E. What's next for > drug >> regulation. Star-Ledger, October 3, 2004; Available at: >> 3. >> > http://www.nj.com/search/index.ssf?/base/business-0/1096777910132280.xml?sta >> rledger?bpha LA. Removal of Vioxx prompts questions about drug > tests. >> Houston Chronicle October 2, 2004; Available at: >> 4. http://www.chron.comO'Connell, P, ed. Early twinges over Vioxx. >> Business Week October 1, 2004; Available at: >> 5. http://www.businessweek.comGorman C. A painful mistake. Time > October >> 4, 2004; Available at: >> 6. http://www.time.comRabin R. Many choices beyond Vioxx. Newsday >> October 2, 2004; Available at: >> 7. http://www.newsday.comLos Angeles Times editorial. A Symptom of > FDA >> laxity. Los Angeles Times October 1, 2004; Available at: >> 8. http://www.latimes.comAssociated Press. Vioxx maker sued over > woman's >> death. New York Times October 3, 2004; Available at: >> 9. http://www.nytimes.comBrown D. Promise and peril of Vioxx cast > harsher >> light on new drugs. Washington Post October 3, 2004; Available at: >> http://washingtonpost.com > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 5, 2004 Report Share Posted October 5, 2004 Personally , I think direct drug marketing to the consumer should once again be illegal. The billions spent on marketing drives the costs up as well as creates a burden on doctors faced with patient demanding new drugs. We're both broken records when it comes to this topic. Our doctors train at medical schools funded by pharmaceuticals so it's not surprising that they fall for their slick advertising. I've lost so much faith in the FDA's ability to protect us from poorly run drug trials. Until they are required to reveal ALL data from trials, we will continue to have people suffering serious adverse side effects. How can we even make an educated decision to take medications when we don't have all the data? a > > This is a very good article, a, and I hope all members take the time > to read it. > > The approval process is flawed, and it's hard to take a drug off the > market once it's out there. > > The pharmaceutical companies should be distanced from the FDA. How can > the FDA be impartial if it receives funding from the drug manufacturers? > Why is so much data from trials suppressed? > > Even if patients are foolish enough to believe that slick advertising, > why do doctors fall for it, too? Or why do they cave in so easily to > patient pressure? I know of so many people (outside of this group) who > have been inappropriately prescribed one of the COX-2s. In the end, we > all pay for that, one way or another. > > I know I must sound like a broken record, but the FDA and their adverse > drug reaction reporting system needs to be revamped pronto! > > > > > I'll tell you where to go! > > Mayo Clinic in Rochester > http://www.mayoclinic.org/rochester > > s Hopkins Medicine > http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org > > > [ ] Rofecoxib withdrawal sparks criticism of FDA and > overaggressivemarketing of coxibs > > >> >> Rofecoxib withdrawal sparks criticism of FDA and overaggressive > marketing of >> coxibs >> >> Oct 4, 2004 Zosia Chustecka >> >> The withdrawal of rofecoxib (Vioxx, Merck & Co) has sparked questions > about >> the way that the FDA handled the issue as well as the way this group > of >> drugs was marketed. >> >> Some of the sharpest criticism comes from cardiologist Dr Topol >> (Cleveland Clinic, OH), who was one of the first to raise concerns > over the >> cardiovascular risk with rofecoxib. " Good riddance to a bad drug, " he > snipes >> in an editorial in the New York Times [1]. " After 3 years of denying > that >> the arthritis drug Vioxx could induce heart attacks and strokes, this > week >> Merck bowed to reality. " >> >> >> Our 2 most common deadly diseases should not be caused by a drug. >> >> >> >> Topol hits out at both the company and the FDA, accusing both of > passivity >> in the face of mounting evidence. " Despite studies showing the > magnitude of >> the public-health problem, for several years Merck did nothing to >> investigate, " he charges, pointing out that at the same time the > company was >> spending vast amounts on direct-to-consumer advertising for the > product. >> " The FDA could have forced Merck to do the appropriate research > studies, but >> instead it was a bystander, " he adds. >> >> " As the Vioxx debacle shows, we have a long way to go in this country > to get >> on track with prescription medications, " Topol thunders in the > editorial. >> " Most important, we need a strong regulatory agency to compel > pharmaceutical >> companies to do the proper studies and force these companies to stop >> direct-to-consumer advertising unless a drug has major benefits for > patients >> and negligible increased risk of heart attacks and strokes. Our 2 most >> common deadly diseases should not be caused by a drug. " >> Could the FDA have acted sooner, done more? >> >> Others have also lashed out at the FDA, pointing out that there have > been a >> number of signals suggesting an increased cardiovascular risk with the > drug >> over the past few years. The Newark Star-Ledger found several critics > [2]. >> >> " The FDA was being inappropriately passive, " says Dr Jerry Avron > (Harvard >> Medical School, Boston, MA), author of the recently published book > Powerful >> Medicines: The Benefits, Risks, and Costs Of Prescription Drugs. He > suggests >> that the US Congress should consider " a separate government agency >> responsible for looking at safety problems of drugs that have been >> approved. " >> >> " The FDA has had a pattern of not being able to act quickly when > products >> are already on the market, " says Dr Wayne Ray (Vanderbilt University, >> Nashville, TN). " Everyone thinks that the FDA is minding the store, > but in >> fact, they are not. " Ray led one of the studies that found an > increased >> cardiovascular risk, which was published in 2002. >> >> But the first inkling of risk came from the company-sponsored VIGOR > trial, >> published in 2000, shortly after the product was launched. These and > other >> data were considered by an FDA advisory meeting in 2001, and a warning > about >> cardiovascular risks was added to rofecoxib's label in 2002. In > Europe, >> warnings were added in 2003. >> >> >> Everyone thinks that the FDA is minding the store, but in fact, > they are >> not. >> >> >> >> Back in 2000, there were enough data to suggest that the FDA could > have >> ordered Merck to conduct an extensive clinical trial to look > specifically at >> safety issues, says Dr Alistair Wood (Vanderbilt University). He told > the >> Star-Ledger he was " confused " as to why there had only been a warning > and >> says there should be an investigation into the agency's handling of > this >> product. " We are dealing with powerful companies and powerful > interests, and >> we need to know what happened, " Wood says. " The public deserves to > have an >> open and proper discussion and an inquiry that involves people other > than >> the interested parties. " >> >> The FDA argues thatuntil last weekthe data were inconclusive. " No drug > is >> fully safe, " says FDA spokesperson Crystal Rice. " Our job is to >> appropriately balance our decisions based on the risk/benefit profile > for a >> drug and the societal need and desire for new drugs and a range of > options >> to treat diseases. " >> >> Even one of the cardiologists who highlighted the CV concerns, Dr > >> Nissen (Cleveland Clinic), comes to the agency's defense. " The FDA did > the >> best it could. I would be cautious laying the blame at the feet of the > FDA, " >> he tells the Star-Ledger. " We have a system of adverse-event > surveillance >> that is weak. I don't know if the FDA can force companies to do > clinical >> trials. There is a limited amount that the FDA can do under current > law. " >> >> Rice reiterates this point. " The agency can only asknot ordercompanies > to do >> further studies on drugs already approved, " she says in an Associated > Press >> article that was syndicated to several newspapers, including the > Houston >> Chronicle [3]. But this article also quotes Wood as saying that " a > very >> quick, very cheap study would have determined the risk had the FDA > taken a >> tougher stance at the first sign of trouble. " >> >> In an interview with Business Week, Nissen recalls how he was asked to >> evaluate rofecoxib when it came up for approval 5 years ago [4]. > Although he >> was concerned then about cardiovascular risks, he says there was no > reason >> for the FDA to reject it at that time. " This was an unusual and subtle >> enough signal that it would have been premature to act on it when we > first >> noticed it. Even in August 2001, when we published our first report on > the >> risks, it was highly speculative. We didn't have hard data. We had > some soft >> data and suspicions about the mechanism of action. We could have just > as >> easily been wrong. " >> >> Even now, he says, " we don't know exactly why " rofecoxib poses a >> cardiovascular risk. One theory is that it affects the balance between >> thromboxane and prostacyclin. Aspirin reduces the levels of > thromboxane >> without affecting prostacyclin, while rofecoxib may be raising the > levels of >> thromboxane and not affecting prostacyclin, he explains. " Celecoxib >> [Celebrex, Pfizer] may work slightly differently. We haven't seen the > heart >> risks with Celebrex, and it has been on the market for about as long > as >> Vioxx. " He doesn't think that celecoxib will now receive a lot of > additional >> scrutinybut any new selective COX-2 inhibitor should. >> >> " We also need a more robust postapproval surveillance system to keep > track >> of adverse events with new drugs, " Nissen says. " Studies have found > that >> only 1% to 10% of serious adverse events with drugs on the market are >> actually reported. So the FDA is making decisions on inadequate data > now. " >> Overaggressive marketing and misleading adverts >> >> Sharp criticism has also been leveled at the way in which rofecoxib > and >> other similar drugs have been marketed. Direct-to-consumer advertising >> included sophisticated mass-media campaigns and television > advertisements, >> often featuring celebrity endorsements. >> >> >> Some patients came and asked for it after seeing Dorothy Hamill > skating >> on TV. >> >> >> >> " These agents have been the subject of absolutely intensive, > unrelenting >> marketing, " says Dr Wofsy (University of California, San > Francisco), >> current president of the American College of Rheumatology, in Time > [5]. >> " Even if you don't have arthritis, you can probably hum the Celebrex > jingle >> or Vioxx's 'It's a beautiful morning,' " the magazine adds. >> >> " I believe they have been overaggressively marketed, " Dr > Greenwald, >> chief of rheumatology at Long Island Jewish Medical Center in New Hyde > Park, >> NY, tells Newsday [6]. Referring to a rofecoxib advertisement > featuring a >> former Olympic ice skater, he says: " Some patients came and asked for > it >> after seeing Dorothy Hamill skating on TV. " Referring to the > nonselective >> nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), he adds: " I believe > that >> manynot allcould be treated with the old drugs. " >> >> Misleading advertisements are one of the problems, says a Los Angeles > Times >> editorial about the withdrawal [7]. Vioxx and its rival celecoxib have > been >> " touted as 'super aspirins' in numerous TV commercials that have > downplayed >> their known cardiovascular risks. Such commercials show how far the > FDA has >> slipped in enforcing its own rules. " >> >> The editorial also maintains that rofecoxib's increased risk of a > heart >> attack compared with older, equally effective, arthritis treatments > such as >> ibuprofen and naproxen has been known since 2000. " So why is Merck is >> recalling the drug now? One can only speculate, but it may have less > to do >> with side effects outweighing benefits than with legal liabilities >> outweighing profits. " >> >> One of the lawsuits that were filed the day after the withdrawal > involves a >> young woman who died of a heart attack after taking rofecoxib for 2 > years, >> the Associated Press reports [8]. Filed by her mother through Missouri >> lawyer McClain, the lawsuit claims that Merck knew of the > risks long >> before its announcement last week. It also claims the doctor who > prescribed >> the drug failed to diagnose the severity of her daughter's heart > condition >> and prescribed rofecoxib despite her medical history. >> >> >> There is this newer-is-better mentality, and this is why we can't > afford >> healthcare. >> >> >> >> The Washing Post highlights the intense promotional efforts directed > at >> physicians, reporting that an IMS Health survey estimated that Merck > spent >> $500 million in 2003 promoting rofecoxib through advertisements in > medical >> journals, free samples, and salespeople's visits to doctors' offices > [9]. It >> also cites another IMS survey, which found that 52% of physicians were >> willing to write a prescription for a COX-2 inhibitor if patients > requested >> them and needed painkillers. >> >> " When a patient comes in and wants something, there is a desire to > serve >> them, " comments Wofsy. " There is a desire on the part of physicians, > as >> there is on anyone else who provides a service, to keep the customer > happy. " >> >> " One of the things that drove their overuse was the widespread > perception, >> even among doctors, that they were somehow better pain relievers, and > they >> never really were, " Avron tells the Washington Post. The newspaper > says the >> coxibs may have worked better in some patients, as individuals vary in > their >> individual response to painkiller, but it also suggests that the > novelty >> coxibs may have produced " something analogous to a placebo effect that >> enhanced their real effect. " >> >> The fact that they were new " alone holds great sway with American > consumers >> and physicians, " it asserts. " They were supposed to be safer, another >> natural appeal. Perhaps most important, they had the cachet of being > an >> expensive prescription medicine in a world of mundane over-the-counter >> generics. " >> >> One of the consequences of the " Vioxx debacle " is that American > society may >> wonder whether expensive new drugspart pharmaceutical, part fetish > objectare >> worth the money, the Washington Post comments. Avron says the answer > is >> generally no. The use of Vioxx by people who did not need the modest > amount >> of stomach protection it offered " has cost billions of dollars that > could >> have been better used for other purposes in our healthcare system, " he > says. >> " There is this newer-is-better mentality, and this is why we can't > afford >> healthcare. " >> >> >> Forum >> >> For further discussions of this topic, please go to Topic: Reactions > to >> rofecoxib withdrawal in the Forum. >> >> >> Sources >> >> 1. Topol EJ. Good riddance to a bad drug. New York Times, October > 2, >> 2004; Available at: >> 2. http://www.nytimes.comCohen R and Silverman E. What's next for > drug >> regulation. Star-Ledger, October 3, 2004; Available at: >> 3. >> > http://www.nj.com/search/index.ssf?/base/business-0/1096777910132280.xml?sta >> rledger?bpha LA. Removal of Vioxx prompts questions about drug > tests. >> Houston Chronicle October 2, 2004; Available at: >> 4. http://www.chron.comO'Connell, P, ed. Early twinges over Vioxx. >> Business Week October 1, 2004; Available at: >> 5. http://www.businessweek.comGorman C. A painful mistake. Time > October >> 4, 2004; Available at: >> 6. http://www.time.comRabin R. Many choices beyond Vioxx. Newsday >> October 2, 2004; Available at: >> 7. http://www.newsday.comLos Angeles Times editorial. A Symptom of > FDA >> laxity. Los Angeles Times October 1, 2004; Available at: >> 8. http://www.latimes.comAssociated Press. Vioxx maker sued over > woman's >> death. New York Times October 3, 2004; Available at: >> 9. http://www.nytimes.comBrown D. Promise and peril of Vioxx cast > harsher >> light on new drugs. Washington Post October 3, 2004; Available at: >> http://washingtonpost.com > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 5, 2004 Report Share Posted October 5, 2004 I'd shed no tears either if they did away with the ads, a. I have been encouraged by the recent stand that a few journals took about not publishing results of human trials unless ALL the data is public. It's about time! One should not have to be a detective to learn about after market adverse effects either. That must change. > Personally , I think direct drug marketing to the consumer should once > again be illegal. The billions spent on marketing drives the costs up as > well as creates a burden on doctors faced with patient demanding new drugs. > > We're both broken records when it comes to this topic. Our doctors train at > medical schools funded by pharmaceuticals so it's not surprising that they > fall for their slick advertising. I've lost so much faith in the FDA's > ability to protect us from poorly run drug trials. Until they are required > to reveal ALL data from trials, we will continue to have people suffering > serious adverse side effects. How can we even make an educated decision to > take medications when we don't have all the data? > > a > > > > > > This is a very good article, a, and I hope all members take the time > > to read it. > > > > The approval process is flawed, and it's hard to take a drug off the > > market once it's out there. > > > > The pharmaceutical companies should be distanced from the FDA. How can > > the FDA be impartial if it receives funding from the drug manufacturers? > > Why is so much data from trials suppressed? > > > > Even if patients are foolish enough to believe that slick advertising, > > why do doctors fall for it, too? Or why do they cave in so easily to > > patient pressure? I know of so many people (outside of this group) who > > have been inappropriately prescribed one of the COX-2s. In the end, we > > all pay for that, one way or another. > > > > I know I must sound like a broken record, but the FDA and their adverse > > drug reaction reporting system needs to be revamped pronto! > > > > > > > > > > I'll tell you where to go! > > > > Mayo Clinic in Rochester > > http://www.mayoclinic.org/rochester > > > > s Hopkins Medicine > > http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org > > > > > > [ ] Rofecoxib withdrawal sparks criticism of FDA and > > overaggressivemarketing of coxibs > > > > > >> > >> Rofecoxib withdrawal sparks criticism of FDA and overaggressive > > marketing of > >> coxibs > >> > >> Oct 4, 2004 Zosia Chustecka > >> > >> The withdrawal of rofecoxib (Vioxx, Merck & Co) has sparked questions > > about > >> the way that the FDA handled the issue as well as the way this group > > of > >> drugs was marketed. > >> > >> Some of the sharpest criticism comes from cardiologist Dr Topol > >> (Cleveland Clinic, OH), who was one of the first to raise concerns > > over the > >> cardiovascular risk with rofecoxib. " Good riddance to a bad drug, " he > > snipes > >> in an editorial in the New York Times [1]. " After 3 years of denying > > that > >> the arthritis drug Vioxx could induce heart attacks and strokes, this > > week > >> Merck bowed to reality. " > >> > >> > >> Our 2 most common deadly diseases should not be caused by a drug. > >> > >> > >> > >> Topol hits out at both the company and the FDA, accusing both of > > passivity > >> in the face of mounting evidence. " Despite studies showing the > > magnitude of > >> the public-health problem, for several years Merck did nothing to > >> investigate, " he charges, pointing out that at the same time the > > company was > >> spending vast amounts on direct-to-consumer advertising for the > > product. > >> " The FDA could have forced Merck to do the appropriate research > > studies, but > >> instead it was a bystander, " he adds. > >> > >> " As the Vioxx debacle shows, we have a long way to go in this country > > to get > >> on track with prescription medications, " Topol thunders in the > > editorial. > >> " Most important, we need a strong regulatory agency to compel > > pharmaceutical > >> companies to do the proper studies and force these companies to stop > >> direct-to-consumer advertising unless a drug has major benefits for > > patients > >> and negligible increased risk of heart attacks and strokes. Our 2 most > >> common deadly diseases should not be caused by a drug. " > >> Could the FDA have acted sooner, done more? > >> > >> Others have also lashed out at the FDA, pointing out that there have > > been a > >> number of signals suggesting an increased cardiovascular risk with the > > drug > >> over the past few years. The Newark Star-Ledger found several critics > > [2]. > >> > >> " The FDA was being inappropriately passive, " says Dr Jerry Avron > > (Harvard > >> Medical School, Boston, MA), author of the recently published book > > Powerful > >> Medicines: The Benefits, Risks, and Costs Of Prescription Drugs. He > > suggests > >> that the US Congress should consider " a separate government agency > >> responsible for looking at safety problems of drugs that have been > >> approved. " > >> > >> " The FDA has had a pattern of not being able to act quickly when > > products > >> are already on the market, " says Dr Wayne Ray (Vanderbilt University, > >> Nashville, TN). " Everyone thinks that the FDA is minding the store, > > but in > >> fact, they are not. " Ray led one of the studies that found an > > increased > >> cardiovascular risk, which was published in 2002. > >> > >> But the first inkling of risk came from the company-sponsored VIGOR > > trial, > >> published in 2000, shortly after the product was launched. These and > > other > >> data were considered by an FDA advisory meeting in 2001, and a warning > > about > >> cardiovascular risks was added to rofecoxib's label in 2002. In > > Europe, > >> warnings were added in 2003. > >> > >> > >> Everyone thinks that the FDA is minding the store, but in fact, > > they are > >> not. > >> > >> > >> > >> Back in 2000, there were enough data to suggest that the FDA could > > have > >> ordered Merck to conduct an extensive clinical trial to look > > specifically at > >> safety issues, says Dr Alistair Wood (Vanderbilt University). He told > > the > >> Star-Ledger he was " confused " as to why there had only been a warning > > and > >> says there should be an investigation into the agency's handling of > > this > >> product. " We are dealing with powerful companies and powerful > > interests, and > >> we need to know what happened, " Wood says. " The public deserves to > > have an > >> open and proper discussion and an inquiry that involves people other > > than > >> the interested parties. " > >> > >> The FDA argues thatuntil last weekthe data were inconclusive. " No drug > > is > >> fully safe, " says FDA spokesperson Crystal Rice. " Our job is to > >> appropriately balance our decisions based on the risk/benefit profile > > for a > >> drug and the societal need and desire for new drugs and a range of > > options > >> to treat diseases. " > >> > >> Even one of the cardiologists who highlighted the CV concerns, Dr > > > >> Nissen (Cleveland Clinic), comes to the agency's defense. " The FDA did > > the > >> best it could. I would be cautious laying the blame at the feet of the > > FDA, " > >> he tells the Star-Ledger. " We have a system of adverse-event > > surveillance > >> that is weak. I don't know if the FDA can force companies to do > > clinical > >> trials. There is a limited amount that the FDA can do under current > > law. " > >> > >> Rice reiterates this point. " The agency can only asknot ordercompanies > > to do > >> further studies on drugs already approved, " she says in an Associated > > Press > >> article that was syndicated to several newspapers, including the > > Houston > >> Chronicle [3]. But this article also quotes Wood as saying that " a > > very > >> quick, very cheap study would have determined the risk had the FDA > > taken a > >> tougher stance at the first sign of trouble. " > >> > >> In an interview with Business Week, Nissen recalls how he was asked to > >> evaluate rofecoxib when it came up for approval 5 years ago [4]. > > Although he > >> was concerned then about cardiovascular risks, he says there was no > > reason > >> for the FDA to reject it at that time. " This was an unusual and subtle > >> enough signal that it would have been premature to act on it when we > > first > >> noticed it. Even in August 2001, when we published our first report on > > the > >> risks, it was highly speculative. We didn't have hard data. We had > > some soft > >> data and suspicions about the mechanism of action. We could have just > > as > >> easily been wrong. " > >> > >> Even now, he says, " we don't know exactly why " rofecoxib poses a > >> cardiovascular risk. One theory is that it affects the balance between > >> thromboxane and prostacyclin. Aspirin reduces the levels of > > thromboxane > >> without affecting prostacyclin, while rofecoxib may be raising the > > levels of > >> thromboxane and not affecting prostacyclin, he explains. " Celecoxib > >> [Celebrex, Pfizer] may work slightly differently. We haven't seen the > > heart > >> risks with Celebrex, and it has been on the market for about as long > > as > >> Vioxx. " He doesn't think that celecoxib will now receive a lot of > > additional > >> scrutinybut any new selective COX-2 inhibitor should. > >> > >> " We also need a more robust postapproval surveillance system to keep > > track > >> of adverse events with new drugs, " Nissen says. " Studies have found > > that > >> only 1% to 10% of serious adverse events with drugs on the market are > >> actually reported. So the FDA is making decisions on inadequate data > > now. " > >> Overaggressive marketing and misleading adverts > >> > >> Sharp criticism has also been leveled at the way in which rofecoxib > > and > >> other similar drugs have been marketed. Direct-to-consumer advertising > >> included sophisticated mass-media campaigns and television > > advertisements, > >> often featuring celebrity endorsements. > >> > >> > >> Some patients came and asked for it after seeing Dorothy Hamill > > skating > >> on TV. > >> > >> > >> > >> " These agents have been the subject of absolutely intensive, > > unrelenting > >> marketing, " says Dr Wofsy (University of California, San > > Francisco), > >> current president of the American College of Rheumatology, in Time > > [5]. > >> " Even if you don't have arthritis, you can probably hum the Celebrex > > jingle > >> or Vioxx's 'It's a beautiful morning,' " the magazine adds. > >> > >> " I believe they have been overaggressively marketed, " Dr > > Greenwald, > >> chief of rheumatology at Long Island Jewish Medical Center in New Hyde > > Park, > >> NY, tells Newsday [6]. Referring to a rofecoxib advertisement > > featuring a > >> former Olympic ice skater, he says: " Some patients came and asked for > > it > >> after seeing Dorothy Hamill skating on TV. " Referring to the > > nonselective > >> nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), he adds: " I believe > > that > >> manynot allcould be treated with the old drugs. " > >> > >> Misleading advertisements are one of the problems, says a Los Angeles > > Times > >> editorial about the withdrawal [7]. Vioxx and its rival celecoxib have > > been > >> " touted as 'super aspirins' in numerous TV commercials that have > > downplayed > >> their known cardiovascular risks. Such commercials show how far the > > FDA has > >> slipped in enforcing its own rules. " > >> > >> The editorial also maintains that rofecoxib's increased risk of a > > heart > >> attack compared with older, equally effective, arthritis treatments > > such as > >> ibuprofen and naproxen has been known since 2000. " So why is Merck is > >> recalling the drug now? One can only speculate, but it may have less > > to do > >> with side effects outweighing benefits than with legal liabilities > >> outweighing profits. " > >> > >> One of the lawsuits that were filed the day after the withdrawal > > involves a > >> young woman who died of a heart attack after taking rofecoxib for 2 > > years, > >> the Associated Press reports [8]. Filed by her mother through Missouri > >> lawyer McClain, the lawsuit claims that Merck knew of the > > risks long > >> before its announcement last week. It also claims the doctor who > > prescribed > >> the drug failed to diagnose the severity of her daughter's heart > > condition > >> and prescribed rofecoxib despite her medical history. > >> > >> > >> There is this newer-is-better mentality, and this is why we can't > > afford > >> healthcare. > >> > >> > >> > >> The Washing Post highlights the intense promotional efforts directed > > at > >> physicians, reporting that an IMS Health survey estimated that Merck > > spent > >> $500 million in 2003 promoting rofecoxib through advertisements in > > medical > >> journals, free samples, and salespeople's visits to doctors' offices > > [9]. It > >> also cites another IMS survey, which found that 52% of physicians were > >> willing to write a prescription for a COX-2 inhibitor if patients > > requested > >> them and needed painkillers. > >> > >> " When a patient comes in and wants something, there is a desire to > > serve > >> them, " comments Wofsy. " There is a desire on the part of physicians, > > as > >> there is on anyone else who provides a service, to keep the customer > > happy. " > >> > >> " One of the things that drove their overuse was the widespread > > perception, > >> even among doctors, that they were somehow better pain relievers, and > > they > >> never really were, " Avron tells the Washington Post. The newspaper > > says the > >> coxibs may have worked better in some patients, as individuals vary in > > their > >> individual response to painkiller, but it also suggests that the > > novelty > >> coxibs may have produced " something analogous to a placebo effect that > >> enhanced their real effect. " > >> > >> The fact that they were new " alone holds great sway with American > > consumers > >> and physicians, " it asserts. " They were supposed to be safer, another > >> natural appeal. Perhaps most important, they had the cachet of being > > an > >> expensive prescription medicine in a world of mundane over-the- counter > >> generics. " > >> > >> One of the consequences of the " Vioxx debacle " is that American > > society may > >> wonder whether expensive new drugspart pharmaceutical, part fetish > > objectare > >> worth the money, the Washington Post comments. Avron says the answer > > is > >> generally no. The use of Vioxx by people who did not need the modest > > amount > >> of stomach protection it offered " has cost billions of dollars that > > could > >> have been better used for other purposes in our healthcare system, " he > > says. > >> " There is this newer-is-better mentality, and this is why we can't > > afford > >> healthcare. " > >> > >> > >> Forum > >> > >> For further discussions of this topic, please go to Topic: Reactions > > to > >> rofecoxib withdrawal in the Forum. > >> > >> > >> Sources > >> > >> 1. Topol EJ. Good riddance to a bad drug. New York Times, October > > 2, > >> 2004; Available at: > >> 2. http://www.nytimes.comCohen R and Silverman E. What's next for > > drug > >> regulation. Star-Ledger, October 3, 2004; Available at: > >> 3. > >> > > http://www.nj.com/search/index.ssf?/base/business- 0/1096777910132280.xml?sta > >> rledger?bpha LA. Removal of Vioxx prompts questions about drug > > tests. > >> Houston Chronicle October 2, 2004; Available at: > >> 4. http://www.chron.comO'Connell, P, ed. Early twinges over Vioxx. > >> Business Week October 1, 2004; Available at: > >> 5. http://www.businessweek.comGorman C. A painful mistake. Time > > October > >> 4, 2004; Available at: > >> 6. http://www.time.comRabin R. Many choices beyond Vioxx. Newsday > >> October 2, 2004; Available at: > >> 7. http://www.newsday.comLos Angeles Times editorial. A Symptom of > > FDA > >> laxity. Los Angeles Times October 1, 2004; Available at: > >> 8. http://www.latimes.comAssociated Press. Vioxx maker sued over > > woman's > >> death. New York Times October 3, 2004; Available at: > >> 9. http://www.nytimes.comBrown D. Promise and peril of Vioxx cast > > harsher > >> light on new drugs. Washington Post October 3, 2004; Available at: > >> http://washingtonpost.com > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 5, 2004 Report Share Posted October 5, 2004 I'd shed no tears either if they did away with the ads, a. I have been encouraged by the recent stand that a few journals took about not publishing results of human trials unless ALL the data is public. It's about time! One should not have to be a detective to learn about after market adverse effects either. That must change. > Personally , I think direct drug marketing to the consumer should once > again be illegal. The billions spent on marketing drives the costs up as > well as creates a burden on doctors faced with patient demanding new drugs. > > We're both broken records when it comes to this topic. Our doctors train at > medical schools funded by pharmaceuticals so it's not surprising that they > fall for their slick advertising. I've lost so much faith in the FDA's > ability to protect us from poorly run drug trials. Until they are required > to reveal ALL data from trials, we will continue to have people suffering > serious adverse side effects. How can we even make an educated decision to > take medications when we don't have all the data? > > a > > > > > > This is a very good article, a, and I hope all members take the time > > to read it. > > > > The approval process is flawed, and it's hard to take a drug off the > > market once it's out there. > > > > The pharmaceutical companies should be distanced from the FDA. How can > > the FDA be impartial if it receives funding from the drug manufacturers? > > Why is so much data from trials suppressed? > > > > Even if patients are foolish enough to believe that slick advertising, > > why do doctors fall for it, too? Or why do they cave in so easily to > > patient pressure? I know of so many people (outside of this group) who > > have been inappropriately prescribed one of the COX-2s. In the end, we > > all pay for that, one way or another. > > > > I know I must sound like a broken record, but the FDA and their adverse > > drug reaction reporting system needs to be revamped pronto! > > > > > > > > > > I'll tell you where to go! > > > > Mayo Clinic in Rochester > > http://www.mayoclinic.org/rochester > > > > s Hopkins Medicine > > http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org > > > > > > [ ] Rofecoxib withdrawal sparks criticism of FDA and > > overaggressivemarketing of coxibs > > > > > >> > >> Rofecoxib withdrawal sparks criticism of FDA and overaggressive > > marketing of > >> coxibs > >> > >> Oct 4, 2004 Zosia Chustecka > >> > >> The withdrawal of rofecoxib (Vioxx, Merck & Co) has sparked questions > > about > >> the way that the FDA handled the issue as well as the way this group > > of > >> drugs was marketed. > >> > >> Some of the sharpest criticism comes from cardiologist Dr Topol > >> (Cleveland Clinic, OH), who was one of the first to raise concerns > > over the > >> cardiovascular risk with rofecoxib. " Good riddance to a bad drug, " he > > snipes > >> in an editorial in the New York Times [1]. " After 3 years of denying > > that > >> the arthritis drug Vioxx could induce heart attacks and strokes, this > > week > >> Merck bowed to reality. " > >> > >> > >> Our 2 most common deadly diseases should not be caused by a drug. > >> > >> > >> > >> Topol hits out at both the company and the FDA, accusing both of > > passivity > >> in the face of mounting evidence. " Despite studies showing the > > magnitude of > >> the public-health problem, for several years Merck did nothing to > >> investigate, " he charges, pointing out that at the same time the > > company was > >> spending vast amounts on direct-to-consumer advertising for the > > product. > >> " The FDA could have forced Merck to do the appropriate research > > studies, but > >> instead it was a bystander, " he adds. > >> > >> " As the Vioxx debacle shows, we have a long way to go in this country > > to get > >> on track with prescription medications, " Topol thunders in the > > editorial. > >> " Most important, we need a strong regulatory agency to compel > > pharmaceutical > >> companies to do the proper studies and force these companies to stop > >> direct-to-consumer advertising unless a drug has major benefits for > > patients > >> and negligible increased risk of heart attacks and strokes. Our 2 most > >> common deadly diseases should not be caused by a drug. " > >> Could the FDA have acted sooner, done more? > >> > >> Others have also lashed out at the FDA, pointing out that there have > > been a > >> number of signals suggesting an increased cardiovascular risk with the > > drug > >> over the past few years. The Newark Star-Ledger found several critics > > [2]. > >> > >> " The FDA was being inappropriately passive, " says Dr Jerry Avron > > (Harvard > >> Medical School, Boston, MA), author of the recently published book > > Powerful > >> Medicines: The Benefits, Risks, and Costs Of Prescription Drugs. He > > suggests > >> that the US Congress should consider " a separate government agency > >> responsible for looking at safety problems of drugs that have been > >> approved. " > >> > >> " The FDA has had a pattern of not being able to act quickly when > > products > >> are already on the market, " says Dr Wayne Ray (Vanderbilt University, > >> Nashville, TN). " Everyone thinks that the FDA is minding the store, > > but in > >> fact, they are not. " Ray led one of the studies that found an > > increased > >> cardiovascular risk, which was published in 2002. > >> > >> But the first inkling of risk came from the company-sponsored VIGOR > > trial, > >> published in 2000, shortly after the product was launched. These and > > other > >> data were considered by an FDA advisory meeting in 2001, and a warning > > about > >> cardiovascular risks was added to rofecoxib's label in 2002. In > > Europe, > >> warnings were added in 2003. > >> > >> > >> Everyone thinks that the FDA is minding the store, but in fact, > > they are > >> not. > >> > >> > >> > >> Back in 2000, there were enough data to suggest that the FDA could > > have > >> ordered Merck to conduct an extensive clinical trial to look > > specifically at > >> safety issues, says Dr Alistair Wood (Vanderbilt University). He told > > the > >> Star-Ledger he was " confused " as to why there had only been a warning > > and > >> says there should be an investigation into the agency's handling of > > this > >> product. " We are dealing with powerful companies and powerful > > interests, and > >> we need to know what happened, " Wood says. " The public deserves to > > have an > >> open and proper discussion and an inquiry that involves people other > > than > >> the interested parties. " > >> > >> The FDA argues thatuntil last weekthe data were inconclusive. " No drug > > is > >> fully safe, " says FDA spokesperson Crystal Rice. " Our job is to > >> appropriately balance our decisions based on the risk/benefit profile > > for a > >> drug and the societal need and desire for new drugs and a range of > > options > >> to treat diseases. " > >> > >> Even one of the cardiologists who highlighted the CV concerns, Dr > > > >> Nissen (Cleveland Clinic), comes to the agency's defense. " The FDA did > > the > >> best it could. I would be cautious laying the blame at the feet of the > > FDA, " > >> he tells the Star-Ledger. " We have a system of adverse-event > > surveillance > >> that is weak. I don't know if the FDA can force companies to do > > clinical > >> trials. There is a limited amount that the FDA can do under current > > law. " > >> > >> Rice reiterates this point. " The agency can only asknot ordercompanies > > to do > >> further studies on drugs already approved, " she says in an Associated > > Press > >> article that was syndicated to several newspapers, including the > > Houston > >> Chronicle [3]. But this article also quotes Wood as saying that " a > > very > >> quick, very cheap study would have determined the risk had the FDA > > taken a > >> tougher stance at the first sign of trouble. " > >> > >> In an interview with Business Week, Nissen recalls how he was asked to > >> evaluate rofecoxib when it came up for approval 5 years ago [4]. > > Although he > >> was concerned then about cardiovascular risks, he says there was no > > reason > >> for the FDA to reject it at that time. " This was an unusual and subtle > >> enough signal that it would have been premature to act on it when we > > first > >> noticed it. Even in August 2001, when we published our first report on > > the > >> risks, it was highly speculative. We didn't have hard data. We had > > some soft > >> data and suspicions about the mechanism of action. We could have just > > as > >> easily been wrong. " > >> > >> Even now, he says, " we don't know exactly why " rofecoxib poses a > >> cardiovascular risk. One theory is that it affects the balance between > >> thromboxane and prostacyclin. Aspirin reduces the levels of > > thromboxane > >> without affecting prostacyclin, while rofecoxib may be raising the > > levels of > >> thromboxane and not affecting prostacyclin, he explains. " Celecoxib > >> [Celebrex, Pfizer] may work slightly differently. We haven't seen the > > heart > >> risks with Celebrex, and it has been on the market for about as long > > as > >> Vioxx. " He doesn't think that celecoxib will now receive a lot of > > additional > >> scrutinybut any new selective COX-2 inhibitor should. > >> > >> " We also need a more robust postapproval surveillance system to keep > > track > >> of adverse events with new drugs, " Nissen says. " Studies have found > > that > >> only 1% to 10% of serious adverse events with drugs on the market are > >> actually reported. So the FDA is making decisions on inadequate data > > now. " > >> Overaggressive marketing and misleading adverts > >> > >> Sharp criticism has also been leveled at the way in which rofecoxib > > and > >> other similar drugs have been marketed. Direct-to-consumer advertising > >> included sophisticated mass-media campaigns and television > > advertisements, > >> often featuring celebrity endorsements. > >> > >> > >> Some patients came and asked for it after seeing Dorothy Hamill > > skating > >> on TV. > >> > >> > >> > >> " These agents have been the subject of absolutely intensive, > > unrelenting > >> marketing, " says Dr Wofsy (University of California, San > > Francisco), > >> current president of the American College of Rheumatology, in Time > > [5]. > >> " Even if you don't have arthritis, you can probably hum the Celebrex > > jingle > >> or Vioxx's 'It's a beautiful morning,' " the magazine adds. > >> > >> " I believe they have been overaggressively marketed, " Dr > > Greenwald, > >> chief of rheumatology at Long Island Jewish Medical Center in New Hyde > > Park, > >> NY, tells Newsday [6]. Referring to a rofecoxib advertisement > > featuring a > >> former Olympic ice skater, he says: " Some patients came and asked for > > it > >> after seeing Dorothy Hamill skating on TV. " Referring to the > > nonselective > >> nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), he adds: " I believe > > that > >> manynot allcould be treated with the old drugs. " > >> > >> Misleading advertisements are one of the problems, says a Los Angeles > > Times > >> editorial about the withdrawal [7]. Vioxx and its rival celecoxib have > > been > >> " touted as 'super aspirins' in numerous TV commercials that have > > downplayed > >> their known cardiovascular risks. Such commercials show how far the > > FDA has > >> slipped in enforcing its own rules. " > >> > >> The editorial also maintains that rofecoxib's increased risk of a > > heart > >> attack compared with older, equally effective, arthritis treatments > > such as > >> ibuprofen and naproxen has been known since 2000. " So why is Merck is > >> recalling the drug now? One can only speculate, but it may have less > > to do > >> with side effects outweighing benefits than with legal liabilities > >> outweighing profits. " > >> > >> One of the lawsuits that were filed the day after the withdrawal > > involves a > >> young woman who died of a heart attack after taking rofecoxib for 2 > > years, > >> the Associated Press reports [8]. Filed by her mother through Missouri > >> lawyer McClain, the lawsuit claims that Merck knew of the > > risks long > >> before its announcement last week. It also claims the doctor who > > prescribed > >> the drug failed to diagnose the severity of her daughter's heart > > condition > >> and prescribed rofecoxib despite her medical history. > >> > >> > >> There is this newer-is-better mentality, and this is why we can't > > afford > >> healthcare. > >> > >> > >> > >> The Washing Post highlights the intense promotional efforts directed > > at > >> physicians, reporting that an IMS Health survey estimated that Merck > > spent > >> $500 million in 2003 promoting rofecoxib through advertisements in > > medical > >> journals, free samples, and salespeople's visits to doctors' offices > > [9]. It > >> also cites another IMS survey, which found that 52% of physicians were > >> willing to write a prescription for a COX-2 inhibitor if patients > > requested > >> them and needed painkillers. > >> > >> " When a patient comes in and wants something, there is a desire to > > serve > >> them, " comments Wofsy. " There is a desire on the part of physicians, > > as > >> there is on anyone else who provides a service, to keep the customer > > happy. " > >> > >> " One of the things that drove their overuse was the widespread > > perception, > >> even among doctors, that they were somehow better pain relievers, and > > they > >> never really were, " Avron tells the Washington Post. The newspaper > > says the > >> coxibs may have worked better in some patients, as individuals vary in > > their > >> individual response to painkiller, but it also suggests that the > > novelty > >> coxibs may have produced " something analogous to a placebo effect that > >> enhanced their real effect. " > >> > >> The fact that they were new " alone holds great sway with American > > consumers > >> and physicians, " it asserts. " They were supposed to be safer, another > >> natural appeal. Perhaps most important, they had the cachet of being > > an > >> expensive prescription medicine in a world of mundane over-the- counter > >> generics. " > >> > >> One of the consequences of the " Vioxx debacle " is that American > > society may > >> wonder whether expensive new drugspart pharmaceutical, part fetish > > objectare > >> worth the money, the Washington Post comments. Avron says the answer > > is > >> generally no. The use of Vioxx by people who did not need the modest > > amount > >> of stomach protection it offered " has cost billions of dollars that > > could > >> have been better used for other purposes in our healthcare system, " he > > says. > >> " There is this newer-is-better mentality, and this is why we can't > > afford > >> healthcare. " > >> > >> > >> Forum > >> > >> For further discussions of this topic, please go to Topic: Reactions > > to > >> rofecoxib withdrawal in the Forum. > >> > >> > >> Sources > >> > >> 1. Topol EJ. Good riddance to a bad drug. New York Times, October > > 2, > >> 2004; Available at: > >> 2. http://www.nytimes.comCohen R and Silverman E. What's next for > > drug > >> regulation. Star-Ledger, October 3, 2004; Available at: > >> 3. > >> > > http://www.nj.com/search/index.ssf?/base/business- 0/1096777910132280.xml?sta > >> rledger?bpha LA. Removal of Vioxx prompts questions about drug > > tests. > >> Houston Chronicle October 2, 2004; Available at: > >> 4. http://www.chron.comO'Connell, P, ed. Early twinges over Vioxx. > >> Business Week October 1, 2004; Available at: > >> 5. http://www.businessweek.comGorman C. A painful mistake. Time > > October > >> 4, 2004; Available at: > >> 6. http://www.time.comRabin R. Many choices beyond Vioxx. Newsday > >> October 2, 2004; Available at: > >> 7. http://www.newsday.comLos Angeles Times editorial. A Symptom of > > FDA > >> laxity. Los Angeles Times October 1, 2004; Available at: > >> 8. http://www.latimes.comAssociated Press. Vioxx maker sued over > > woman's > >> death. New York Times October 3, 2004; Available at: > >> 9. http://www.nytimes.comBrown D. Promise and peril of Vioxx cast > > harsher > >> light on new drugs. Washington Post October 3, 2004; Available at: > >> http://washingtonpost.com > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 5, 2004 Report Share Posted October 5, 2004 Amen, a! They do tell some of the adverse side effects on those commercials, but they probably go unnoticed by most people. The funniest side effect I've heard is " an erection that lasts for more than four hours, " LOL. Sue On Tuesday, October 5, 2004, at 02:28 AM, a54 wrote: > > Personally , I think direct drug marketing to the consumer should > once > again be illegal. The billions spent on marketing drives the costs up > as > well as creates a burden on doctors faced with patient demanding new > drugs. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 5, 2004 Report Share Posted October 5, 2004 Amen, a! They do tell some of the adverse side effects on those commercials, but they probably go unnoticed by most people. The funniest side effect I've heard is " an erection that lasts for more than four hours, " LOL. Sue On Tuesday, October 5, 2004, at 02:28 AM, a54 wrote: > > Personally , I think direct drug marketing to the consumer should > once > again be illegal. The billions spent on marketing drives the costs up > as > well as creates a burden on doctors faced with patient demanding new > drugs. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 11, 2004 Report Share Posted October 11, 2004 LOL, Sue! I believe that side effect is highlighted as a selling point rather than a caution. I'll tell you where to go! Mayo Clinic in Rochester http://www.mayoclinic.org/rochester s Hopkins Medicine http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org Re: [ ] Rofecoxib withdrawal sparks criticism of FDA and overaggressivemarketing of coxibs > > Amen, a! They do tell some of the adverse side effects on those > commercials, but they probably go unnoticed by most people. The > funniest side effect I've heard is " an erection that lasts for more > than four hours, " LOL. Sue Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 11, 2004 Report Share Posted October 11, 2004 LOL, Sue! I believe that side effect is highlighted as a selling point rather than a caution. I'll tell you where to go! Mayo Clinic in Rochester http://www.mayoclinic.org/rochester s Hopkins Medicine http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org Re: [ ] Rofecoxib withdrawal sparks criticism of FDA and overaggressivemarketing of coxibs > > Amen, a! They do tell some of the adverse side effects on those > commercials, but they probably go unnoticed by most people. The > funniest side effect I've heard is " an erection that lasts for more > than four hours, " LOL. Sue Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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