Guest guest Posted July 17, 2004 Report Share Posted July 17, 2004 > atracyphd2 > Sat, 17 Jul 2004 13:30:17 EDT > [drugawareness] Psychiatric News-System > Flawed Insuring Safety of All Drugs > > > Believe it or not reading the July 16 issue of > Psychiatric News is like > reading my book on the SSRI antidepressants!!! The > opening statement is explosive! > Ready? Here it is: > _______________________________ > > The ongoing controversy surrounding SSRIs in > children is now threatening the > very foundations of clinical drug research on the > efficacy and safety of all > of the drugs physicians prescribe. > > Physicians in the trenches are beginning to wonder > what exactly they really > know— or perhaps don't know—about the drugs they > are prescribing and how that > knowledge base affects what is written on the > prescriptions that bear their > signatures. > > Many of the concerns raised recently have been heard > before. In this last > year, however, they have risen to a level that > seriously challenges physicians' > comfort level with prescription drugs. Particularly > disconcerting are new > allegations that question the integrity of not only > the scientific evidence base, > but also the system that produces the data and the > researchers who analyze it. > ___________________________ > > FINALLY they are beginning to see the light! Too bad > we are not yet seeing > that in reality. Doctors are still blindly > prescribing these drugs at an > alarming rate even to children. So get this article > out to as many professionals and > news media as possible in an effort to educate more > of them. > > Then to see in print one of the strongest negative > statements yet on the > dangers of SSRIs given to children is very > encouraging. > ______________________________ > > " In discussing their own data, the authors of all of > the four larger studies > have exaggerated the benefits, downplayed the harms, > or both, " Jureidini and > his coauthors wrote. > > " Improvement in control groups is strong; additional > benefit from drugs is of > doubtful clinical significance, " they said, adding, > " adverse effects have > been down-played. " They concluded that > " antidepressant drugs cannot confidently > be recommended as a treatment option for childhood > depression. " > > Jureidini and his coauthors pointed out that > " accurate trial reports are a > foundation of good medical care. It is vital that > authors, reviewers, and > editors ensure that published interpretations of > data are more reasonable and > balanced than is the case in the industry-dominated > literature on childhood > antidepressants. " > _______ > > Please allow me to repeat that conclusion for you: > " antidepressant drugs > cannot confidently be recommended as a treatment > option for childhood depression. " > > > This is what we have been saying all along. Why did > so many have to die > before we saw this statement in mainstream > literature? And how long must we wait to > see the same statement for the adult population as > well? > > Alos most interesting to note is the following > statement on what our doctors, > in whom we place so much trust, actually have access > to in making decisions > about medications. > ______________________________ > > In response to Laughren's comments, the government > official who asked not to > be named said, " It is not only possible that the FDA > does not have all the > data, it is highly probable. " > > Yet, Psychiatric News discovered that even if the > FDA possesses all of the > relevant data on a particular product, that data may > not be easily accessible to > the medical community, researchers, the media, or > the public. > > " Data become available only after an approval > action, " Laughren said, " and > then only data that clinical and statistical > reviewers [at the FDA] decide to > include in their reviews [become part of the drug > approval package]. The > original data sets are proprietary and never > available unless a sponsor decides to > release them. " > > > Ann Blake Tracy, Ph.D., > Executive Director, International Coalition For Drug > Awareness > Author: Prozac: Panacea or Pandora? - Our Serotonin > Nightmare > & audio tape on safe withdrawal: " Help! I Can't Get > Off My Antidepressant! " > > Order Number: 800-280-0730 > Website: www.drugawareness.org > > ___________ > > In response to Laughren's comments, the government > official who asked not to > be named said, " It is not only possible that the FDA > does not have all the > data, it is highly probable. " > > Yet, Psychiatric News discovered that even if the > FDA possesses all of the > relevant data on a particular product, that data may > not be easily accessible to > the medical community, researchers, the media, or > the public. > > " Data become available only after an approval > action, " Laughren said, " and > then only data that clinical and statistical > reviewers [at the FDA] decide to > include in their reviews [become part of the drug > approval package]. The > original data sets are proprietary and never > available unless a sponsor decides to > release them. " > > <A > HREF= " http://pn.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/content/full/39/14/1?maxtoshow=http://p\ n.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/content/full/39/14/1?maxtoshow= & HITS=20 & > hits=20 & RESULTFORMAT= & stored_search= & FIRSTINDEX=0 & tocsectionid=Professional* & > displaysectionid=Professional+News & journalcode=psychnews > >    > Similar articles found in: > Psychiatric News    > Download to Citation Manager    >    > Psychiatric News July 16, 2004 > Volume 39 Number 14 > © 2004 American Psychiatric Association > p. 1 > Professional News > > Clinical Trials Controversy Spotlights Flawed System > > > Jim Rosack > > The ongoing controversy surrounding SSRIs in > children is now threatening the > very foundations of clinical drug research on the > efficacy and safety of all > of the drugs physicians prescribe. > > Under the frequent—and often > hyperbolic—headlines in major newspapers > throughout the United States, the debate on whether > SSRIs really cause children and > adolescents to become suicidal has boiled down to a > critical realization: > Physicians now face a crisis of confidence in the > American-bred system that > conducts clinical research and, it would seem, > publishes only the most marketable > results., > > >    >    >    > > > >    >    >    > Physicians in the trenches are beginning to wonder > what exactly they really > know— or perhaps don't know—about the drugs they > are prescribing and how that > knowledge base affects what is written on the > prescriptions that bear their > signatures. > > Many of the concerns raised recently have been heard > before. In this last > year, however, they have risen to a level that > seriously challenges physicians' > comfort level with prescription drugs. Particularly > disconcerting are new > allegations that question the integrity of not only > the scientific evidence base, > but also the system that produces the data and the > researchers who analyze it. > > In April the British Medical Journal published a > paper by Jon Jureidini, > M.D., head of the department of psychological > medicine at Women's and Children's > Hospital in North Adelaide, Australia, and > colleagues. The article reviewed the > evidence base for efficacy and safety of > antidepressants in children and > adolescents. The authors included in their review > published clinical trials, as > well as some unpublished data made public by the > U.K. Committee on Safety of > Medicines. At best, Jureidini's conclusions were > direct and to the point, but by > some people's estimation the conclusions seemed > inflammatory, with abundant > references to the individuals who led the research > or wrote the articles, rather > than to the research methods, data analysis, or > conclusions. > > " In discussing their own data, the authors of all of > the four larger studies > have exaggerated the benefits, downplayed the harms, > or both, " Jureidini and > his coauthors wrote. > > " Improvement in control groups is strong; additional > benefit from drugs is of > doubtful clinical significance, " they said, adding, > " adverse effects have > been down-played. " They concluded that > " antidepressant drugs cannot confidently > be recommended as a treatment option for childhood > depression. " > > Jureidini and his coauthors pointed out that > " accurate trial reports are a > foundation of good medical care. It is vital that > authors, reviewers, and > editors ensure that published interpretations of > data are more reasonable and > balanced than is the case in the industry-dominated > literature on childhood > antidepressants. " > > Jureidini listed a " competing interest " with the BMJ > study, noting he is the > chair of Healthy Skepticism, an international > lobbying organization based in > Australia whose goal is " improving health by > reducing harm from inappropriate, > misleading, or unethical marketing of health > products or services, especially > misleading pharmaceutical promotion. " > > So, it was a bit unusual that an article in a major > peer-reviewed publication > appeared to be directly questioning the very > integrity of the researchers who > had overseen clinical antidepressant trials. Many > researchers interviewed for > this article saw it as an unusually personal attack. > > > The researchers who took the brunt of the apparent > attack were the principal > investigators and lead authors of the trials in > question: Graham Emslie, M.D., > the Charles E. and Sarah M. Seay Chair in Child > Psychiatry and professor of > psychiatry in the Graduate School of Biomedical > Sciences at the University of > Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas; Martin > Keller, M.D., a professor > of psychiatry and human behavior at Brown > University; and Karen Dineen Wagner, > M.D., Ph.D., the Clarence Ross Miller Professor of > Psychiatry and Behavioral > Sciences and director of child and adolescent > psychiatry at the University of > Texas Medical Branch at Galveston > > Emslie was the principal investigator on the > fluoxetine (Prozac) pediatric > trials; Keller oversaw pediatric clinical trials of > paroxetine (Paxil); and > Wagner was the principal investigator on two > sertraline (Zoloft) pediatric > clinical trials. > > Two weeks after the BMJ article, Lancet published a > systematic review of > SSRIs for childhood depression that also compared > published and unpublished data > from the same clinical trials that Jureidini > analyzed. > > Picking Through the Data > > Tim Kendall, M.D., deputy director of the Royal > College of Psychiatry's > Research Unit in London and co-author on the Lancet > article, talked with > Psychiatric News about the group's findings. Kendall > explained that for each > antidepressant medication, the group analyzed > published clinical trial data separately > from unpublished data from U.K. regulatory > authorities and found discrepancies. > > " From the published data, we thought we might have > recommended some of these > drugs, " Kendall said. " In other words, the > risk-benefit profile, in the main, > was favorable—not massively so, but at least > modestly so. " Then, he said, " we > looked at the unpublished data, and they clearly > were not favorable. " > > For example, Kendall said, the response data for > paroxetine looked better > than for placebo, though the difference was only > modest (see chart). With regard > to adverse events, even in the published data, there > " was clearly a problem > with the drug. " > > When the group analyzed the unpublished data, the > findings shifted. For > example, response rates were significantly lower for > paroxetine, and the placebo > effect was even more pronounced than it was in the > published data. This > effectively narrowed the difference between the two > groups, voiding the statistical > significance. In addition, the adverse-event > picture, including the data on > suicidal behavior, looked more troubling. > > When the researchers analyzed the published and > unpublished data together, > the SSRI no longer held a reasonable benefit for > pediatric depression to justify > the apparent risks. > > There was not a " massive difference " between " the > published stuff versus the > unpublished, " Kendall said, " but [the profile] > certainly switches from a > favorable riskbenefit profile to an unfavorable > one. " And with each of the SSRIs > the researchers examined, they found the same trend: > the published data were > significantly more favorable than the data that had > not been peer reviewed. > > Defining Context > > Neither Keller nor Wagner responded to multiple > requests for interviews for > this article; however, Emslie agreed to an extended > phone interview. > > " Apart from the first Prozac trial and one of the > Paxil trials, all the rest > of the data [in question] arise from an act of > Congress, not from the industry > wanting to do these studies, " Emslie told > Psychiatric News. > > Indeed, the data on SSRI use in children largely > resulted from Food and Drug > Administration (FDA) requests to drug manufacturers > issued through the old > " Pediatric Rule " —a regulation born from the Food > and Drug Administration > Modernization Act of 1997 (FDAMA). However, FDAMA > did not require that studies be > carried out and provided little if any penalty for a > company not agreeing to the > FDA's request. In essence, the Pediatric Rule gave > companies' an additional six > months of patent protection for conducting minimal > research to collect data > on safety of a medication in pediatric populations. > Under the Rule, the FDA > requested pediatric data from manufacturers of the > 100 top-selling medications in > the U.S. > > Drug companies were slow to undertake pediatric > research, and the FDA's legal > authority to mandate pediatric clinical trials was > challenged. Finally, the > Pediatric Rule was given the weight of law under The > Pediatric Research Equity > Act of 2003 (PREA) which left in place patent > extension but further defined > the FDA's legal authority to mandate studies. In > addition, PREA required > pediatric studies as part of every application for > approval of every drug—with few > exceptions—retroactive to include all applications > submitted since January 1, > 1999. > > However, between the Pediatric Rule and PREA, the > FDA began receiving > pediatric data that did not live up to the > expectations of either Congress or the > FDA. > > " Many of the companies simply threw together the > quickest, cheapest, easiest, > clinical trial of their drug in kids they possibly > could, " said one > government official, a senior researcher who is > familiar with the situation and agreed > to comment if not named. > > " The companies pretty much knew from the outset that > they wouldn't get a full > pediatric indication, and the Pediatric Rule > [initially] didn't really have > any stipulations that the data had to be good or the > methods solid. The rule > simply said if they submitted some data, they'd get > their patent extended. And > that, simply, translated into dollars, " the official > explained. > > Indeed, in many cases, the Pediatric Rule was > directly responsible for > hundreds of millions of dollars in additional sales > of a branded product over the > six-month extension. > > The official continued, " Data collection in these > studies was sloppy, > recruitment was sloppy, the statistics and methods > were manipulated, and, of course, > only the positive studies were submitted. Why would > a drug company put out > data that are negative? That would amount to > commercial suicide. But what can you > expect, really? Garbage in, garbage out. " > > Emslie agreed in part. " Getting all the positive as > well as the negative > data " is an issue, he said. But this is true for > many different classes of > medications, " not just antidepressants, he said (see > box). > > Wanted: All Relevant Data > > The PREA was intended to ensure that the FDA was > given all the appropriate > pediatric data, both positive and negative, on a > product so that an initial > approval decision could be made on the whole data > set, not just the most > marketable data set. > > The law includes language mandating that for any > application to the FDA for a > " new active ingredient, new indication, new dosage > form, new dosing regimen, > or new route of administration, " the application > must include " data, gathered > using appropriate formulations for each age group... > to assess the safety and > effectiveness of the drug or the biological product > for the claimed > indications in all relevant pediatric subpopulations > [and data to] support dosing and > administration for each pediatric subpopulation for > which the drug or biological > product is safe and effective. " > > If a drug maker fails to submit all of the data, the > drug could be declared > " misbranded solely because of that failure and > subject to relevant enforcement > action. " > > Yet the FDA acknowledges that even today—a year > and a half after the PREA > went into effect—the agency isn't sure whether it > has all the data it's supposed > to have on the medications submitted under PREA's > requirements. > > " I'm not aware of any standard mechanism in place > for assuring that all > pertinent data have been submitted, " Thomas > Laughren, M.D., medical team leader of > the FDA's Neuropharmacological Drug Products > division, told Psychiatric News. > " It depends mostly on the review team being aware of > what has been done. " > > Nonetheless, Laughren was not aware of any instance > in which a company was > found to have purposefully withheld data from the > agency. > > In response to Laughren's comments, the government > official who asked not to > be named said, " It is not only possible that the FDA > does not have all the > data, it is highly probable. " > > Yet, Psychiatric News discovered that even if the > FDA possesses all of the > relevant data on a particular product, that data may > not be easily accessible to > the medical community, researchers, the media, or > the public. > > " Data become available only after an approval > action, " Laughren said, " and > then only data that clinical and statistical > reviewers [at the FDA] decide to > include in their reviews [become part of the drug > approval package]. The > original data sets are proprietary and never > available unless a sponsor decides to > release them. " > > The FDA has attempted with some success to increase > access to the information > by posting a large amount of summary data on its Web > site under an > " Approvals " section. > > If someone is looking for data not posted on the > FDA's Web site, the person > must file a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) > request. Over the last year, in > the course of this ongoing investigative report, > Psychiatric News filed FOIA > requests for " all approval package documents [and] > their attachments and > appendices " for each of the antidepressant > medications being questioned. To date, a > large amount of data has been received in response > to those requests. > > Over the last several months, several SSRI > manufacturers have been accused in > the media of attempting to " bury or hide " negative > study data. The > increasingly heated issue led the AMA, at the > request of APA and the American Academy of > Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, to advocate for a > mandatory, federally > administrated, clinical trials registry (see page > 1). Separately, a large group of > medical journal editors called for the same thing. > > In the meantime, GlaxoSmithKline announced it would > create its own registry > and publicly post it on its Web site. At the same > time the company posted > summary data from all of its pediatric paroxetine > studies, the majority of which > had never been made public. Shortly thereafter, > Merck announced it would support > such a clinical trials register, and Forest Labs > released pediatric data on > both citalopram and escitalopram. In Washington, > D.C., several senators and > representatives called for legislation establishing > a mandatory registry for all > clinical research, even though FDAMA already > contains an obscure requirement > that all trials be registered. > > Comparing Apples and Oranges > > The most significant issue facing regulators and > researchers in attempting to > analyze the safety and effectiveness of SSRIs in > pediatric populations is the > extreme variability between and within the studies > (see chart on page 1). > > " First of all, some of these [pediatric > antidepressant] studies were > conducted in Europe, some in America, " Arif Khan, > M.D., pointed out. Khan is medical > director at the Northwest Clinical Research Center > in Bellevue, Wash., and was > involved in conducting or reviewing many of the > studies now in question. " The > conduct of American trials by American psychiatrists > is a situation that is > entirely different from European trials conducted by > psychiatrists there. " > > Some differences in these studies, Khan told > Psychiatric News, include > differences in the studies' methodology, > populations, and data assessment, and may > not be directly comparable. > > " Some of the European studies had an overabundance > of adolescent girls in the > drug groups versus the placebo groups, " Khan said as > an example. " The > randomization wasn't even. " > > Emslie echoed this same point, adding that he > suspects that most subjects in > the European trials had mild to moderate depression, > rather than severe > depression. Significant evidence in adult > populations indicates that SSRIs are not > very effective for mild to moderate adult > depression. Thus, Emslie asked, " why > would they work for mild or moderate depression in > kids? " > > In addition, many methodological differences exist > among the studies in the n > umber of sites used and the number of researchers > involved, the protocols for > assessment and randomization into the study, and the > statistical analyses of > the resulting data. > > " You have an extremely heterogeneous group of trials > using differing > definitions and assessments on differing study > populations and different analyses, " > Khan said. " So obviously any comparisons are going > to be questionable. " > > Experts consulted by Psychiatric News agreed that > meta-analyses and overall > reviews of the two dozen or so pediatric > antidepressant clinical trials may > never reach any reliable conclusions about efficacy > and safety of SSRIs in > pediatric populations. > > " The FDA and the Columbia University group may not > come up with any solid > answers, " Khan suggested, referring to the group of > suicidality experts > contracted by the FDA to reanalyze the SSRIs' > adverse-effect profiles. " What you see is > that this suicidal behavior in the placebo group > runs anywhere from 0.6 > percent to just under 5 percent. In the drug groups > it runs from a low of just > under 3 percent to a high of 8 percent. There's a > lot of variability, but in > general the pattern holds true. There is a fairly > clear trend in increased risk in > the drug groups versus the placebo groups, > regardless of which drug you are > looking at. " > > Common Ground Sought > > That trend does have one exception: fluoxetine. It > is the only antidepressant > whose data were strong enough to have won FDA > approval for the treatment of > pediatric depression. Most of the experts > interviewed for this article, > including Khan and Kendall, agreed that the > published and unpublished data on > fluoxetine's effectiveness and safety in children > and adolescents show that the drug > provides significant clinical improvement and has > not been as closely > associated with the harmful and suicidal behaviors > of other SSRIs in children. > > Emslie— " the father of pediatric Prozac " —can't be > sure why fluoxetine is > different from the other SSRIs. > > " First of all, with respect to efficacy, you have to > ask whether or not it > really is any better than the other SSRIs, " Emslie > said. " But no controlled > head-to-head studies have been done in children and > adolescents. So it could be > methodological differences. We did those studies > early on [in the evolution of > SSRI pediatric clinical trials], and maybe we did > something better with respect > to study population or had better quality sites with > better investigators. As > far as safety is concerned, it may be that the drug > is better tolerated on > some level, and I certainly think that dosing is > probably easier with > fluoxetine. " > > The FDA expects to schedule a second advisory > committee meeting on the issue > as soon as it receives the reanalysis from the > Columbia University group. The > report had been expected in early July, but as this > article went to press, > neither the agency nor the university indicated that > the release of the report > was imminent. > > So for those clinicians who continue to question > their confidence in SSRI > prescriptions for children and adolescents, there is > no immediate resolution in > sight. > > " We really don't know anything different today than > we did five years ago, " > Khan said. " What we have is a mixture of trial > results that generally favor the > active drug. The trials certainly do not favor > placebo, and it is important > that that is understood. Failed trials don't > necessarily mean that a drug does > not work. " > > Emslie echoed Khan's statement, adding that " it's > really a question of how do > these clinical trials inform us about clinical > guidelines for care. I think > they inform us that generally the SSRIs are probably > effective— the data are > largely ambiguous, but certainly not negative. But > every medication [requires] a > risk-benefit analysis. " > > Khan added, " As long as the patient and the > clinician understand what the > risk profile is, I think it is very appropriate to > prescribe [sSRIs]. " > > The individuals interviewed by Psychiatric News > agreed on at least one point: > " We've really got to get this right, " Kendall said. > " The whole clinical and > scientific community, as well as regulators and the > public, need to be involved > in assuring that we do get it right. Our patients > deserve nothing less. " > > An abstract of the Lancet article, " Selective > Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors > in Childhood Depression: Systematic Review of > Published Versus Unpublished > Data, " is posted online at > <www.thelancet.com/journal/vol363/iss9418/abs/llan.36 > 3.9418.original_research.29377.1>. The BMJ article, > " Efficacy and Safety of > Antidepressants for Children and Adolescents, " is > posted at < > http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/328/7444/879>. > > > BMJ 2004 328 879 > [Free Full Text] > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been > removed] > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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