An article by pediatric cardiologist, Dr. Darshak Sanghavi, the author of “A
Map of the Child: A Pediatrician’s Tour of the Body,” should be required
reading for everyone who is prompted to follow the instruction in every drug
advertisement– “ask your doctor.”
Dr. Sanghavi demonstrates how medicine under the influence of commercial
interests has distorted the meaning of risk for disease and benefit of
treatment by framing the issue in terms of “relative risks” rather than
individual risk and benefit to the individual. What doctors and medical
journals, and even FDA-approved label–fail to disclose is the number needed
to treat (NNT) to prevent an “absolute risk” for an individual, and the NNT
for one person to get a benefit.
If a drug is helpful to 1 out 50 who take it, and no benefit for 49
persons–and if the drug has a list of serious adverse side-effects–why
would millions of people take it?
But when the risk for disease and the benefit to be gained from treatment
are described in terms of “relative risk” both risk and benefit are
inflated.
“Well-meaning public-health authorities may tolerate the exaggerations of
relative risks because they scare people into taking drugs of very slight
individual benefit, and if huge numbers of people comply, a few lives may be
saved.”
Given that the real beneficiaries of promoting erroneous perceptions about
risks and benefits are drug companies and others with financial investment
in increasing sales, it is difficult to call this “well-meaning.”
In fact, the commercial influence on medicine has undermined the legitimate
healing mission into disease mongering and the promotion of dangerous
treatments that induce new (iatrogenic) diseases rather than prevent them.
What Dr. Sanghavi doesn’t say, is that doctors who prescribe unneeded drugs
widely may likely have a competing self-interest because drug companies
shower doctors–especially influential “authorities” in their specialty with
cash, gifts, posh resort vacations, consultancies, “educational grants” and
of course, free lunch, free samples, dinner, and more–
See: Carl Elliott. The Drug Pushers, The Atlantic Monthly, April 2006:
http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/prem/200604/drug-reps
See also: Disease Mongering, PLoS Medicine, April 2006:
http://collections.plos.org/plosmedicine/diseasemongering-2006.php
Contact: Vera Hassner Sharav
veracare@ahrp.org <mailto:veracare@ahrp.org>
http://www.slate.com/id/2150354/
SLATE Sept. 26, 2006
Treat Me?
The crucial health stat you’ve never heard of. By Darshak Sanghavi
If anything is supposed to be certain in medicine, it’s that people with
high cholesterol levels should be treated. But should they? Sifting through
the underlying science reveals that the way in which scientists and drug
companies describe the benefits of many medications-by framing the question
in terms of “relative risks”-systematically inflates their value. The result
is that patients frequently buy and consume medicines that do very little
good. An alternative way of describing the benefits of medical therapy could
help change that-if doctors and nurses would start using it.
Take cholesterol-lowering drugs. In 1995, the prestigious New England
Journal of Medicine published a study strengthening the case that
otherwise-healthy men with high cholesterol should take cholesterol-lowering
drugs called statins. Researchers in Scotland reported a 31-percent
reduction in the risk of heart attacks among men taking the statin
pravastatin, sold by Bristol-Myers Squibb under the brand name Pravachol.
Due in part to this study, Pravachol became one of Bristol-Myers’ most
profitable drugs and now grosses more than $2 billion in sales per year.
A 31 percent reduction in heart attacks, after all, seems impressive. Yet
this pervasive way of describing clinical trials in medical
journals-focusing on the “relative risk,” in this case of heart
attack-powerfully exaggerates the benefits of drugs and other invasive
therapies. What, after all, does a 31 percent relative reduction in heart
attacks mean? In the case of the 1995 study, it meant that taking Pravachol
every day for five years reduced the incidence of heart attacks from 7.5
percent to 5.3 percent. This indeed means that there were 31 percent fewer
heart attacks in patients taking the drug. But it also means that the
“absolute risk” of a heart attack for any given person dropped by only 2.2
percentage points*
<http://www.slate.com/toolbar.aspx?action=print&id=2150354#correction>
(from 7.5 percent to 5.3 percent). The benefit of Pravachol can be
summarized as a 31 percent relative reduction in heart attacks-or a 2.2
percent absolute reduction.
There’s another instructive way to consider the numbers. Suppose that 100
people with high cholesterol levels took statins. Of them, 93 wouldn’t have
had heart attacks anyway. Five people have heart attacks despite taking
Pravachol. Only the remaining two out of the original 100 avoided a heart
attack by taking the daily pills. In the end, 100 people needed to be
treated to avoid two heart attacks during the study period-so, the number of
people who must get the treatment for a single person to benefit is 50. This
is known as the “number needed to treat.”
Developed by epidemiologists in 1988, the NNT was heralded as a new and
objective tool to help patients make informed decisions. It avoids the
confusing distinction between “relative” and “absolute” reduction of risk.
The NNT is intuitive: To a savvy, healthy person with high cholesterol that
didn’t decrease with diet and exercise, a doctor could say, “A statin might
help you, or it might not. Out of every 50 people who take them, one avoids
getting a heart attack. On the other hand, that means 49 out of 50 people
don’t get much benefit.”
But drug companies don’t want people thinking that way; whenever possible,
they frame discussions of drugs in terms of relative risk reduction. That’s
why the package insert for Pravachol highlights the 31 percent reduction and
mentions the NNT not at all. In Pfizer’s 2005 press release promoting the
Food and Drug Administration’s approval of Lipitor for patients with
diabetes and other risk factors for heart disease, the company said the drug
“reduced the relative risk of stroke by 26 percent compared to placebo.” In
its 2002 press release promoting an anti-osteoperosis drug, Actonel, Aventis
exulted that treated women were “75 percent less likely to experience a
first vertebral fracture.” It’s standard for such promotions to make no
reference to NNT and to bury information about absolute risks or leave it
out entirely.
The reason is simple: Big numbers encourage people, even those who should
know better, to prescribe drugs. In 1991, researchers performed a survey of
faculty and students in epidemiology at Harvard Medical School-a group that
should understand health statistics. When they were presented with identical
information about a drug in different formats, almost half had a “stronger
inclination to treat patients after reading of the relative change,” or risk
reduction, as opposed to the NNT.
When a therapy is extremely effective-like surgery for acute appendicitis or
insulin for juvenile diabetes-no one worries about NNTs. But most
interventions aren’t home runs, and so NNTs are often the only way to tell
if they may be worthwhile, medically and economically. Is your shoulder
painful and stiff? The NNT for a cortisone shot is three, which is pretty
good, but that also means two out of three patients won’t feel any better
after the needles. Does your child have an ear infection? Your pediatrician
obliges with a bottle of amoxicillin, but the NNT for antibiotics to shorten
the duration of fever is more than 20; thus, at least 19 out of 20 parents
force the stuff down their toddlers’ throats for no reason. Is your prostate
enlarged? The NNT to avoid surgery is 18 if you take Proscar for four years.
The drug costs $100 per month per person, so an insurer spends $86,400 to
prevent a single surgery for enlarged prostate. Are you thinking of taking
aspirin to help avoid a heart attack? The NNT is a lousy 208. Keep in mind
that none of these figures include the risks of side effects.
In some cases, drug companies aren’t the only ones with an incentive to
exaggerate a drug’s benefit. Consider statins again. Though an individual
person with high cholesterol has little reason to take them (since 49 out of
50 get no benefit), when millions of at-risk people consume the drug, the
numbers of averted heart attacks add up. Well-meaning public-health
authorities may tolerate the exaggerations of relative risks because they
scare people into taking drugs of very slight individual benefit, and if
huge numbers of people comply, a few lives may be saved.
These kinds of not-entirely-honest messages about public health aren’t
necessarily a problem, even when the NNT for a treatment is very high and
thus the likelihood of individual benefit of treatment is very low-that is,
as long as the touted intervention is cheap, painless, and accessible. Two
examples: wearing a seatbelt and eating a healthy diet. But the calculation
is different if we’re talking about an expensive drug. Or something people
are supposed to do themselves that’s highly polemical, rife with guilt, and
sometimes extremely stressful. Like breast-feeding.
In June, the New York Times ran an article headlined, “Breast-Feed or Else.”
It suggested that experts believe that “breast-fed babies are at lower risk
for sudden infant death syndrome
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/health/diseasesconditionsandhealthtopics
/suddeninfantdeathsyndrome/index.html> and serious chronic diseases later
in life, including asthma
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/health/diseasesconditionsandhealthtopics
/asthma/index.html?> , diabetes
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/health/diseasesconditionsandhealthtopics
/diabetes/index.htmlr> , leukemia
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/health/diseasesconditionsandhealthtopics
/leukemia/index.htm> and some forms of lymphoma.”
Yet, the article never mentions the NNT for breast-feeding to prevent these
scary diseases. Neither does any general-interest press article in
LexisNexis, a database. There’s a reason for this omission: The NNTs are
astronomically high. Reasonable women might think that breast-feeding isn’t
worth the trouble-a conclusion that you don’t want drawn if you’re promoting
breast-feeding at any cost.
In the end, the excuse that it’s OK to promote largely ineffective drugs and
interventions for the sake of the greater good doesn’t really wash. Nor does
the excuse that NNTs are difficult to understand conceptually or that the
math is too hard. Patients look to doctors to translate and interpret
complex, often-conflicting information from drug companies, medical
journals, and the media. NNTs are a tool for doing that. Doctors must keep
faith that patients can get it together to understand their choices. If we
make their use standard, patients and public discussion will follow suit.
Correction, Sept. 26, 2006: The sentence originally said that the “absolute
risk” of a heart attack for a person taken Pravachol dropped by 2.2 percent,
rather than 2.2 percentage points. (Return
<http://www.slate.com/toolbar.aspx?action=print&id=2150354#return> to the
corrected sentence.)
Darshak Sanghavi <http://www.darshaksanghavi.com/> is a pediatric
cardiologist and assistant professor of pediatrics at the University of
Massachusetts Medical School. He is the author of A Map of the Child: A
Pediatrician’s Tour of the Body
<http://www.amazon.com/Map-Child-Pediatricians/dp/0805075119/
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