Guest guest Posted September 22, 2004 Report Share Posted September 22, 2004 SSRI-Research@ Tue, 21 Sep 2004 23:15:28 -0400 [sSRI-Research] Prescription anxiety Prescription anxiety By Jerry Avorn | September 20, 2004 http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2004/09/20/pres\ cription_anxiety?mode==PF THE CONTROVERSY over whether antidepressants increase the risk of suicide in young people is evidence of major flaws in how we develop, evaluate, promote, and use prescription drugs. The first medicine in this class was introduced more than 15 years ago; they have since become some of the most widely ingested medications in America. Why did it remain unclear for so long whether these products can cause a potentially fatal side effect in children? Most Americans are surprised to learn that the Food and Drug Administration does not test drugs itself; instead, it nearly always relies on studies conducted by their manufacturers. These pre-marketing trials are usually held to standards so low that their results just can't provide the information that I as a doctor need in order to think intelligently about giving prescriptions. In general, a company can win FDA approval for a new drug by showing that it works better than a sugar pill over a time frame that can be remarkably brief -- as short as eight to 12 weeks, even for drugs that may be taken for years. A manufacturer can conduct multiple studies, many of which might produce negative results. But as long as it can submit two positive trials, the agency is likely to approve marketing. (The results of the other studies may be buried.) Complicated patients, such as the elderly, the chronically ill, and children are often underrepresented in such clinical trials -- or left out entirely. Side effects can be missed if they occur only with prolonged use, in combination with other drugs, or in vulnerable populations. And such studies don't begin to answer whether a new drug is better than existing alternatives or what its effects will be over a lifetime of use. The very questions I most need answered in choosing a medication are ignored in such quick pre-approval studies, because the FDA does not require that they even be asked. This approach may not be ideal for doctors or patients, but it works well for pharmaceutical companies in several ways: It holds down the costs of clinical trials and avoids revealing that a new product is no better than existing medicines, which is often the case. After a drug is approved, the FDA does sometimes ask manufacturers to perform systematic post-marketing studies of the effects of their products once they are in widespread use. But in a report last year assessing its portfolio of active surveillance projects, the agency admitted that fully half the studies it mandated had not even been started. All drugs that work have risks, and the goal of wise prescribing -- and of wise public policy -- is to understand those risks so they can be weighed against a drug's benefits. Here again our regulatory apparatus and the pharmaceutical industry have let us down. In order to persuade (some would say bribe) companies to measure the effects of their products in children, the federal government agreed to give lucrative six-month patent extensions to companies if they tested their drugs in this age group. All that was required was testing -- again, against placebo. Patent extension was granted regardless of what those tests showed. Many of these trials were small, brief, and underpowered. For drugs like Paxil and Zoloft, they failed to provide evidence of a clinical benefit against which the emerging information on risk could have been compared. The problem runs even deeper. Just as the pharmaceutical industry has hegemony over most drug testing, it also controls much of the information that doctors and patients see about the safety and effectiveness of its products. This is usually accomplished through the ubiquitous din of promotion to physicians and consumers that drives so much drug prescribing and taking. But now we learn that there is also a larger problem. Doctors and the public never got to see vital negative information about antidepressants in adolescents that was present in company-sponsored trials. Several of those studies found that the drugs failed to help patients and increased the risk of suicide. Even more shamefully, the FDA discounted a thorough analysis of clinical trial data that was performed last year by one of its own scientists, documenting a higher risk of self-harm in young people assigned to take antidepressants rather than placebo. This finding has now been confirmed in an analysis by researchers at Columbia University that was released at last week's FDA hearings. Ironically, the antidepressant-suicide debate follows a recent Bush administration proposal that would prohibit legal action against drug companies over any product the FDA had approved. The lapses now being uncovered in companies' disclosures of their own antidepressant trial data, and the FDA's occasional tendency to underestimate drugs' potential for lethal side effects, make it clear how counterproductive this policy would be. Some of the most relevant hidden information on adverse drug effects can be discovered by attorneys in the course of litigation on behalf of patients who have been harmed. This may be a weird way for a nation to conduct drug safety research, but unless we do a better job through conventional means, it isn't one we should discard. The FDA continues to devote inadequate attention to measuring the risk-benefit relationships of the drugs it approves. The nation requires a more effective approach to these vital questions, beginning with more head-to-head comparisons of drugs for effectiveness and safety, and continuing with a robust system of post-marketing surveillance. The public also deserves access to a complete reckoning of the findings of all clinical trials conducted by companies in testing their products; no results should be hidden in the name of corporate prerogative. In a healthcare system as rich as ours, we physicians should not have to rely on attorneys general, tort lawyers, journalists, and whistleblowers to uncover the facts we need about the risks and benefits of the medications we prescribe. Dr. Jerry Avorn, an internist and associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, is the author of " Powerful Medicines: the Benefits, Risks, and Costs of Prescription Drugs. 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