October 26

Concealed Drug Trial Results Mislead Doctors & Put Children’s Lives at Risk – NYT

Concealed Drug Trial Results Mislead Doctors & Put Children’s Lives at Risk – NYT

Thu, 22 Jul 2004

The inordinate influence that drug companies wield on government healthcare regulatory policies–through campaign contributions to elected officials and lucrative job offers to public officials–has seriously compromised children’s safety in numerous ways.

An illuminating article in The New York Times describes how loopholes in drug legislation and public officials who have turned a blind eye and a deaf ear to drug safety issues, are putting children’s health and safety at risk of serious harm.

Public policymakers and oversight agency officials have become government protectors of the drug industry-even as they know about severe adverse drug effects that put children’s health at risk–they put industry’s financial interests first.

The Times reports how drug companies are exploiting loopholes in the 1997 FDA Modernization Act (FDAMA) to conceal vital information about severe adverse drug effects in children. FDAMA was enacted to encourage the testing of drugs in children-presumably the tests were needed to provide safety and dosing information to physicians who prescribe the drugs for children off-label. But as we had predicted, the law’s beneficiaries are not children. See: https://ahrp.org/infomail/0402/april192002.htm

FDAMA offers drug companies six month patent extension to protect their freedom from competition if they test their drugs in children. Drug companies have been cashing in on the financial incentive at a brisk pace. But, when the test findings are negative-either demonstrating no benefit for children-such as antidepressants and drugs to treat headaches–or when drugs are linked to severe adverse effects-antidepressants, anti-fungal drugs, such as Diflucan–the companies conceal the findings, and conceal the fact that the drug was ever tested in children.

The Times reports: “Reviewing test data provided by the maker, Pfizer, the F.D.A. concluded that Diflucan was not very effective for ringworm – and that a child could risk liver damage if given high doses of the drug.”

That information never made it to the drug’s label. When asked about the need to protect children’s lives by disclosing adverse drug effects, FDA officials point to loopholes in the law and shrug their shoulders. The Times calls it “a quirk” that “labels are often allowed to remain silent about a test when the F.D.A. turns down a company’s application for approval of a new use or a new patient group – as in the case of Diflucan and ringworm.” We call it deception.

The priority of FDA’s mission is: “protecting the public health by assuring the safety, efficacy, and security of…drugs…biological products, medical devices…” and “helping the public get accurate, science-based information they need to use medicines and foods to improve their health.” FDA officials who are more concerned about protecting corporate secrecy than protecting children’s lives, they are perverting FDA’s mission: See: http://www.fda.gov/opacom/morechoices/mission.html

We believe that FDA officials who have turned their backs on safety issues that threaten the health of children, by helping drug manufacturers conceal vital health safety information, should be prosecuted as partners in crime against children.

For those who may be interested in a critical analysis of the impact of FDAMA and its successor, the 2002 Best Pharmaceuticals for Children Act, on children’s safety, see: ETHICAL HUMAN SCIENCES & SERVICES Summer 2003, vol. 5 pp. 83-108 https://ahrp.org/testimonypresentations/FDAmodernization03.php

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http://www.nytimes.com/2004/07/21/business/21drug.html

July 21, 2004
MEDICINE’S DATA GAP
Results of Drug Trials Can Mystify Doctors Through Omission
By BARRY MEIER

A pediatrician who has read medical journals lately might have seen articles advocating the use of the antifungal drug Diflucan for the treatment of ringworm, a childhood skin infection. But reading the extensive medical information enclosed in the drug’s package, the same doctor would not learn that federal drug regulators had rejected Diflucan for ringworm use. Reviewing test data provided by the maker, Pfizer, the F.D.A. concluded that Diflucan was not very effective for ringworm – and that a child could risk liver damage if given high doses of the drug.

It is a quirk of the F.D.A.’s labeling rules. For a drug’s government-approved uses, the label gives doctors important data from clinical tests involving those treatments while spelling out the drug’s risks and providing directions for administering it to patients.

But labels are often allowed to remain silent about a test when the F.D.A. turns down a company’s application for approval of a new use or a new patient group – as in the case of Diflucan and ringworm.

Pfizer and the F.D.A. both say that the Diflucan label conforms to the agency’s rules and accurately reflects the drug’s approved uses for adults and children, as well as its risks.

The labeling issue is another facet of an expanding debate over the incomplete disclosure and publication of the results of clinical drug trials. And it is one of growing importance to a number of physicians.

The doctors worry that ambiguous or incomplete drug labels may lead them to prescribe drugs for treatments that F.D.A.-reviewed tests have shown to be ineffective or potentially risky. Printed material accompanying many drugs says the drug’s safety and effectiveness “has not been established” in children – when some have been tested for pediatric use, with equivocal results.

Until recently, several popular antidepressants carried the “has not been established” language despite tests in children and adolescents that raised questions about their efficacy. Regulators and manufacturers have since issued safety warnings about those drugs amid concerns that, in a sharply limited number of cases, they may cause depressed youngsters to consider suicide.

“If it has been tested, we want that to be reflected” on the label, said Dr. Richard Gorman, a pediatrician who is chairman of the committee on drugs of the American Academy of Pediatrics.

In recent weeks, the academy and other medical groups have met with lawmakers to discuss possible legislation requiring companies to list tests of drugs and medical devices in a public database. And yesterday, Representative Henry A. Waxman, Democrat of California, sent a letter to Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy G. Thompson, urging him to release data from all pediatric drug trials that have been conducted under federal laws that encourage such tests.

Dr. Shirley Murphy, director of the F.D.A.’s division of pediatric drug development, said that several members of an agency advisory committee that met in May had expressed concern that some drug labels omitted any reference to clinical drug trials that were negative or equivocal. The group included Dr. Gorman.

“They noticed that some labels have lots of information and other labels didn’t have information,” Dr. Murphy said.

The issue of test disclosure on labels is not limited to pediatric trials. With few exceptions, federal law bars the F.D.A. from acknowledging that clinical tests were conducted, if the agency receives the test data as part of a drug maker’s effort to have an existing product approved for a new use or category of patients and the F.D.A. turns down the request.

Drug companies may publicly disclose such failures through a press release or a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, though such information would not necessarily find its way onto a label. And if a company chooses not to publicize a test failure, a doctor typically would not learn from a drug’s label that such trials ever took place, a high-ranking F.D.A. official, Dr. Robert Temple, said.

“If we don’t agree” with the company, said Dr. Temple, the F.D.A.’s associate director for medical policy, “the doctor would not know about that.”

Dr. Temple said there were exceptions, like a case when the trial of a drug shows a new or increased safety risk beyond those previously indicated on the label. Other exceptions include pediatric drug trials conducted under a federal law passed in 2002, the Best Pharmaceuticals for Children Act.

As with an earlier law in 1997, the 2002 measure was passed to promote the testing of drugs in children because pharmaceutical companies had customarily not performed such trials. Instead, the practice was to seek approval for uses in adults, then leave it to pediatricians to prescribe the drugs on an off-label basis – as doctors are allowed to do, although drug makers cannot actively market drugs for such nonapproved uses.

To encourage tests in children and adolescents, who may react differently than adults do to some drugs, the laws gave drug makers a powerful financial incentive – an additional six months of patent protection from generic competition when the medications were tested for pediatric use, even if the trials showed the drugs to be of dubious value.

Dr. Gorman said he and others who helped draft the 1997 legislation quickly realized that they had failed to include a way to force a company to disclose all results from medications tested under the law. And so the 2002 law required that the F.D.A. release summary reports of such drug tests.

Currently, reports on about 30 drugs received by the agency since mid-2002 are on the Web at www.fda.gov/cder/pediatric. There, for example, a browser would find the summary report on Pfizer’s pediatric tests of Diflucan. But Dr. Gorman says he now believes, as a result of the antidepressant controversy, that the 2002 bill was not explicit enough.

“We didn’t go the next step – about what would go on the label,” he said.

All involved agree that the laws have increased the amount of labeling information about the use of many drugs in children, like the age groups where they are effective or how the drugs should be administered. And in some cases, new warning information reflects safety issues that arose in tests, like those on packaging of some cortisone-based treatments for skin infections.

Of the 98 drugs that qualified for testing under the 1997 and 2002 laws, the labels on 76 have been changed, F.D.A. officials said, while to date the labels on 22 drugs have not.

The information gap between test findings and label information can occur even when F.D.A. officials are aware that doctors are increasingly using a medication off label for a particular problem.

In the case of Diflucan, according to a test summary, it was the agency that asked Pfizer to run the ringworm trials. Regulators were concerned, according to that report, that pediatricians were turning to Diflucan because of dissatisfaction with an older medication and because published studies, some sponsored by Pfizer, reported that Diflucan was superior.

After reviewing two Pfizer-run pediatric studies, the F.D.A. concluded earlier this year that Diflucan did not work any better than the older, generic drug, griseofluvin, which also poses toxicity risks. In the agency’s report, regulators also raised concerns that children could face liver problems and other risks if doctors, seeking to treat ringworm more effectively, started using higher doses of Diflucan, which is known generically as fluconazole.

“As some adverse events may be dose-dependent,” the F.D.A. document said, “it is expected that higher doses of fluconazole may approach dosages where the safety of pediatric patients may be at greater risk.”

Dr. Murphy, at the F.D.A., said that the ringworm tests had not been noted on Diflucan’s label because it did not win approval as a ringworm treatment.

A Pfizer spokeswoman, Mariann Caprino, said the company was discussing the drug’s labeling language with F.D.A. officials. She also said the tests did not raise any safety concerns beyond those already mentioned in the label. The F.D.A. also turned down an effort last year by another drug maker, Allergan, to get its antibacterial eye ointment, Ocuflox, approved for use in infants because trial data suggested the drug was not particularly effective in newborns. But the label continues to say that the drug’s “safety and effectiveness in infants below the age of one has not been established.”

There is little question that some drugs fail in pediatric trials because the tests are poorly run or not properly designed for children. F.D.A. reviewers raised the possibility of a design flaw in their report about Ocuflox.

And while the F.D.A. review of pediatric test results for the popular migraine treatments Imitrex and Zomig found that the drugs worked no better than placebos in children, pediatric headache experts involved in those trials cited flaws in the test design. Dr. Gorman said it was important for all doctors, not just those who treat children, to know that trials with negative or equivocal outcomes have been conducted when considering the benefits and risks of a medication before prescribing it.

Dr. Temple said that, speaking personally, he also believed that drug companies and medical device producers should voluntarily disclose test results – regardless of what F.D.A. rules may require. Otherwise, they face the risk of seeming to bury information.

“If I was consulting companies, I would say ‘Let it out,’ ” Dr. Temple said. “Now, it looks like something secret has been uncovered.”

Copyright 2004 The New York Times Company

FAIR USE NOTICE: This may contain copyrighted (C ) material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. Such material is made available for educational purposes, to advance understanding of human rights, democracy, scientific, moral, ethical, and social justice issues, etc. It is believed that this constitutes a ‘fair use’ of any such copyrighted material as provided for in Title 17 U.S.C. section 107 of the US Copyright Law. This material is distributed without profit.


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