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FDA Blues

 
 
au1929
 
Reply Fri 26 Nov, 2004 10:40 am
FDA Blues

Friday, November 26, 2004; Page A38



NEITHER THE recent Senate testimony of David J. Graham, an unhappy Food and Drug Administration employee, nor the controversy over Merck Inc.'s decision to withdraw its painkiller Vioxx from the market have provided conclusive evidence that the FDA's coziness with the drug industry has made the agency, in Mr. Graham's words, "incapable of protecting America against another Vioxx." But they do provide evidence that intellectual fashions in the field of drug regulation have changed. In 1992, Congress passed a law designed to speed up the rate of new drug approval, because too many ill people were having to wait too long for new treatments. Now, the FDA's higher speed of drug approval is sometimes cited as evidence that the agency is too friendly to the drug industry. Similarly, when large numbers of drugs were withdrawn from the market in the past, the agency was accused of having to do so because of sloppy approval procedures. But when fewer drugs are withdrawn, as has recently been the case, the agency is said to be too reluctant to hurt the companies whose drugs it has approved, despite the fact that the lower rate of withdrawal also reflects a smaller number of new drugs on the market.

The current discussion has also demonstrated that the tools the FDA uses to regulate drugs once they are on the market are too blunt. Soon after it had been approved, for example, the agency suspected that the use of Vioxx might cause cardiovascular problems. But officials had to negotiate for a year before they were able to persuade Merck to add that risk to the drug's labels. The negotiation was time-consuming because, other than withdrawing a drug from the market -- which the agency is rightly reluctant to do unless serious risks have been proven (and the risks of Vioxx were not) -- the FDA doesn't have any way to force drug companies to change their labeling. Yet drug labels cannot only warn patients of possible side effects, they can also alert physicians to categories of patients who should not be taking particular drugs. In a world in which there are more kinds of drugs than ever and in which some risks will be considered worth enduring for some categories of patients but not for others, labels play an important role and must be reliable.
The same is true of post-approval testing of drugs already on the market. The FDA can recommend that a company undertake a clinical trial, but the agency cannot demand that a company do so, nor can it order independent or comparative testing. For that to be possible, the agency would need greater resources, as well as greater enforcement powers, both of which would have to come from Congress. In recent years, the number of drugs that Americans take has risen rapidly, yet the agency's drug safety funding and capacity have remained flat. When the new Congress takes its place in January, members should look harder at the tools the FDA uses in regulating drugs and at whether they should be improved.


Is this simply a case if damn if you do and damn if you don't? The congressional hearings, which are sure to come. Will place all the blame on the agency. The solution may be or at least someone has proposed it. To set up a watchdog agency in other words have someone watch the watcher. That seems to be what congress is best at, adding layer after layer of bureaucracy. I guess they have friends and supporters that need jobs.
Who do you think is culpable and where does the remedy lie.
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Larry434
 
  1  
Reply Fri 26 Nov, 2004 10:56 am
I take lots of medications.

If I read the warning label on any of them and took it seriously, I would take none of them.

On balance, the FDA has done a good job of assuring the medicines do more good than harm, IMO.
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au1929
 
  1  
Reply Fri 26 Nov, 2004 11:15 am
Larry434 wrote:
I take lots of medications.
If I read the warning label on any of them and took it seriously, I would take none of them.IMO.


Agreed. That is why Dr.s upon prescribing a new medication usually give a sample quantity to check if it both does the job and does not have an adverse effect upon the patient.
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au1929
 
  1  
Reply Fri 26 Nov, 2004 03:55 pm
How drug-approval woes crept up on FDA

Critics charge conflict of interest in a system where pharmaceutical giants fund the regulatory process.

By Alexandra Marks | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

For many Americans, opening up the medicine cabinet may seem far more perilous than it did just a few months ago. Revelations about potentially deadly problems with government-approved drugs - from Merck's painkiller Vioxx to Bayer's cholesterol-fighter Baycol - have prompted even the conservative Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) to charge that the Food and Drug Administration's system for protecting consumers is broken.
The JAMA's doctors are calling for an independent board to be set up to monitor the safety of drugs already on the market.

The pharmaceutical industry calls that "premature," noting that FDA has asked the prestigious Institute of Medicine to study the problem and then make recommendations. But consumer advocates and some members of Congress contend that change is long overdue, in part because of the FDA's financial dependence on the pharmaceutical industry. That, they say, creates a conflict of interest that undermines the agency's effectiveness.

"The FDA has a relationship with drug companies that is far to cozy," says Sen. Charles Grassley (R ) of Iowa, who chaired hearings last week on drug safety. "That's exactly the opposite of what it should be. The health and safety of the public must be FDA's first and only concern."

This growing conflict over drug safety illustrates the difficulty the nation has had in achieving the right balance in regulating drugs that, while intended to help save lives, can come with very serious risks.

In the 1980s, critics railed against the FDA for being too slow in approving drugs. One congressman referred to FDA investigators as "pusillanimous and faint-hearted" for their cautious approach.

It took more than two years, on average, for new drugs to be approved. That changed after a major shake-up in 1992, and so did the FDA's funding. Congress passed the Prescription Drug User Fee Act, which increased FDA funding for drug approvals by charging pharmaceutical companies a user fee. In the next 10 years, the drug companies paid $825 million dollars to the FDA, according to the JAMA. During that same period, the time it took for new drugs to be approved dropped by almost half, to just over a year. But that speed had a cost, according to the JAMA: "Drug recalls following approval increased from 1.56% for 1993-1996 to 5.35% for 1997-2001."

The Vioxx scandal indicates to many medical experts that the FDA's regulatory loosening up may now have gone too far.

It's one of a handful of drugs that have slipped through the FDA system completely. Despite studies that showed the aggressively marketed painkiller appeared to cause cardiovascular problems, Merck and high-level FDA regulators decided to leave it on the market and only put a limited warning on the label.

That distressed David Graham, a safety expert within the FDA's Office of Drug Safety. He continued to research problems with Vioxx, primarily because "millions of people" took it. He concluded it presented a "significant risk" of causing of heart attacks and sudden death. In last week's testimony he said that his FDA superiors, particularly in the Office of New Drugs which gives out drug approvals, pressured him to change his conclusions.

"An e-mail from the director for the entire Office of New Drugs was revealing," said Dr. Graham. "He suggested that since the FDA was not contemplating a warning against the use of high-dose Vioxx, my conclusions should be changed."

Another senior manager called Graham's conclusions "scientific rumor." Eight days later, Merck itself voluntarily pulled the drug from the market. Researchers estimate that between 139,000 people had strokes and heart attacks related to their Vioxx use since it went on the market. Of those, 55,000 people may have died.

Vioxx manufacturer Merck denies those numbers, saying they are only "speculation." It also insists the earlier studies showing cardiovascular problems were not conclusive and that it had full confidence in the drug. CEO Raymond Gilmartin said his wife was taking Vioxx the day Merck pulled it off the market.

But consumer activists say Vioxx is not the only problematic drug that has been given FDA approval. Public Citizen's Health Research Group did a survey in 1998 of FDA medical officers, and found 27 cases "in which they said a drug was too dangerous to be approved, but was approved over their heads anyway," says Sidney Wolfe, the group's director.

Fueled in part by the appearance that the FDA's Office of New Drugs could veto conclusions of the Office of Safety, the JAMA has called for a new drug safety board, one completely independent of the FDA. "It is unreasonable to expect that the same agency that was responsible for approval of drug licensing and labeling would also be committed to actively seek evidence to prove itself wrong," the JAMA editorial concludes.

But the industry contends that the Vioxx case is not indicative of the way the FDA usually functions. Jeff Trewhitt, a spokesman for the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA), contends that the Office of Drug Safety is independent of the Office of New Drugs and has successfully raised red flags about drugs.

Calling the FDA the "gold standard" for drug regulation, he says less than 3 percent of some 10,000 drugs on the market are pulled for safety reasons.
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