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AUGUST 2007: News on SSRIs, other Psych Drugs and Related Issues

August 1 2007 at 10:24 PM
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Grants from Pharma Industry abused to influence Health & Policies Decisions

August 3 2007, 1:55 PM 

http://www.pharmatimes.com/WorldNews/ViewArticle.aspx?id=11437

Grants from pharma industry are abused, claims coalition - 03/08/2007

There is “quite extensive evidence” that charitable and educational grants from the pharmaceutical industry have been abused to influence public health and policy decisions improperly, a US public health coalition has claimed.

Big pharmaceutical companies should disclose all their charitable and educational grants and gifts, says a letter sent by the coalition - which includes Essential Action, the American Public Health Association, Families USA, Health Action International, Oxfam International and Public Citizen - to leading drugmakers and industry associations.

“Big Pharma has used its charitable and educational funding to influence key public policy debates, affect doctors’ prescribing decisions and over-promote diseases and drug treatments,”
claims Robert Weissman, director of Essential Action, which organised the letter. “Disclosure of industry funding of think tanks, patient groups, and continuing education courses doesn’t cure this problem, but it is a start,” he adds.

“Purportedly educational” programmes sponsored by industry may improperly promote drugs, including for off-label uses, while consumer groups worldwide have repeatedly found industry-funded patient groups promoting particular medicines, and industry-friendly public policies, without sufficient regard for safety concerns, the coalition claims. However, in May, Eli Lilly began publishing its charitable and educational contributions in the USA and the coalition’s letter urges other companies to follow Lilly’s lead, on a global basis.

The full text of the public health coalition letter and list of signatories is available at: www.pharmadisclose.org. By Lynne Taylor "

 

Yes indeed.  It happens in the UK too.

http://www.sane.org.uk/public_html/News/Mental_Health_News.shtm

"NEW SCHIZOPHRENIA CAMPAIGN LAUNCHED AT THE HOUSE OF COMMONS
27 July 2006

SANE’s chief executive, Marjorie Wallace, and head of strategy, Margaret Edwards attended the launch of a new 1 in 100 educational initiative at the House of Commons on 11 July. 1 in 100 aims to promote choice through knowledge, by providing comprehensive information to people experiencing schizophrenia, their families and friends. Entitled, ‘The Picture’s Looking Brighter’, the new campaign sponsored by Janssen-Cilag UK also looks to support a more positive view on schizophrenia...."

 

http://www.pharmafocus.com/cda/focusH/1,2109,21-0-0-JUL_2007-focus_news_detail-0-491364,00.html

Janssen's Invega approved in Europe
Thursday , July 12, 2007

"...Janssen-Cilag's once-daily schizophrenia treatment, Invega, has been granted European approval, making it the first oral, prolonged-release drug for the condition on the market.

Invega (paliperidone) is the company's follow-up to its highly successful atypical antipsychotic, Risperdal, which is due to lose patent protection in 2008.

Last year, in England and Wales, Risperdal (risperidone) accounted for £44 million of GP prescribing, compared to £108 million for Lilly's market leader Zyprexa (olanzapine)..."

"...Invega is the active metabolite of risperidone and works by fully blocking serotonin receptors, and partially blocks D2 dopamine receptors..."

"...Marjorie Wallace, chief executive at mental health charity Sane, said: "We are pleased that innovative delivery technologies are being applied to new  treatments for schizophrenia.

[new? its slow release is new, but its still risperidone however much they call it new]

New treatment options such as Paliperidone are a significant opportunity for more people with schizophrenia to effectively manage their disease, working with their medical team to live more fulfilling and productive lives."..."

[its a significant opportunity for more people told they are schizophrenic to be effectively persuaded by their medical team that old drugs are new drugs and how under the new drugs they will be able to live MORE fulfilling and productive lives than they could under the crippling effects of the old drug, and an even more significant opportunity for all those benefitting from the financial kickbacks one way or another to raise their incomes]

"...Risperdal Oral was first launched in the early 1980s and more recently Jannsen-Cilag extended the franchise by launching Risperdal Quicklet and Risperdal Consta, a long-acting. injectable antipsychotic...."

 

http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200405/cmselect/cmhealth/42/4112502.htm

"... —  There is world wide alarm because of the effects of the Selective Serotonin Uptake Inhibitors and allegations that information from clinical trials has been suppressed. A courageous leading campaign has been pursued by MIND who receives no contributions from any pharmaceutical company. There has been silence from SANE and Depression Alliance who accept donations. I have been in contact with all three organisations. There are grounds for suspicion that, at best, donations may have an inhibiting effect on the two latter groups. This may explain why they have failed to add to the concerns eloquently expressed by MIND..."


 
 
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Testimony of Dr Sidney Wolfe et al before FDA on Avandia, Call to Ban

August 3 2007, 2:24 PM 

Not a psych drug, but just as important.

http://www.citizen.org/publications/release.cfm?ID=7536

" Testimony Before the FDA Advisory Committee Meeting on Rosiglitazone (HRG Publication #1820)

FDA Endocrine Metabolic Drugs Advisory Committee Meeting on Rosiglitazone: July 30, 2007

Testimony of Sidney Wolfe M.D., Elizabeth Barbehenn Ph.D. and Ben Wolpaw, Health Research Group of Public Citizen

I will focus on the fourth question to the committee: Does the overall risk-benefit profile of rosiglitazone (Avandia) support its continued marketing in the US?

The evidence presented today concerning the increased risk of ischemic heart disease including myocardial infarctions appears to justify the removal of this drug from the market, but due to the ubiquitous nature of PPAR gamma receptor sites in so many parts of the body, it is hardly surprising that there are many other significant kinds of damage this drug is causing to patients.

Preclinical (Pre-Approval) and Post-Approval Evidence of Cardiac Toxicity

In a 1999 FDA pharmacology review of animal toxicity, "rosiglitazone produced various toxicities such as left atrial thrombosis, hydrothorax, cardio hypertrophy and elevations of hepatic enzymes in the high dose group. In this reviewer's opinion, it is not possible to anticipate potential human toxicities" and stated that "these findings appear as long term clinical concern." The final recommendation states "Pharmacology recommends not to approve rosiglitazone for the proposed indication for long-term human use."

In dogs, at doses only 1.2 times higher than the human dose, there was evidence of significant cardiac hypertrophy after 26 weeks.

 

Avandia1c

 

In her review of animal and human evidence of cardiac toxicity of PPAR gamma agonists such as rosiglitazone last year, former FDA Pharmacologist Dr. Jeri El-Hage stated:

  • There was fluid accumulation in all species (mouse, rat, dog, rabbit, monkey, human).
  • Fluid accumulation leads to weight gain, edema, cardiac hypertrophy with resultant heart failure in all species.
  • Drug-induced heart failure and death were observed with chronic treatment (>6 months in animals and man).
  • In people, the longer a patient was on a PPAR gamma, the lower the dose needed to produce edema or CHF.

In a recently published meta-analysis of randomized trials with rosiglitazone (2 trials) and pioglitazone (1 trial) co-authored by Dr. Curt Furberg, the increased risk of heart failure compared to placebo was 2.1 (95% CI of 1.08-4.08)

Finally, in FDA adverse reaction reports filed since marketing began through the end of last year, there were 698 cases of heart failure reported with Avandia compared with 39 for the older diabetes drug, Glucotrol. Adjusting for differences in the number of prescriptions for the two drugs, the rate of heart failure reports for Avandia compared with Glucotrol was 15.2 times higher.

Avandia2

 

Preclinical (Pre-Approval) and Post-Approval Evidence of Liver Toxicity

In the pre-clinical 1999 FDA pharmacology review, evidence of liver toxicity was seen in dogs at a dose only 1.2 times higher than the human dose that included ALT, AST and LDH in males that increased to being statistically significant in males and females (ALT only) by 25 weeks in the next higher dose.

In eight published case reports of rosiglitazone-caused liver toxicity, with human exposures ranging from two weeks to 15 months, for the seven patients for whom follow-up data was available, five recovered within two weeks to four months after the drug was stopped. Two of the patients died. Bilirubin levels in these patients, consistent with the similar hepatocellular toxicity seen with troglitazone (Rezulin), ranged from 2.9 to 22.3 with an average of 10.5.

Avandia3

Finally, in FDA adverse reaction reports filed since marketing began through the end of last year, there were 594 cases of hepatic toxicity (including 122 cases of liver failure) reported with Avandia compared with 53 cases of toxicity (and only seven cases of liver failure) for Glucotrol. Adjusting for differences in the number of prescriptions for the two drugs, the increased adjusted rate of reports for Avandia compared with Glucotrol was 9.5 times higher than Glucotrol for all reports of hepatic toxicity and 14.8 times higher for hepatic failure.

There were 46 reports of deaths from hepatic failure with Avandia, and six with Glucotrol, for an adjusted rate of 6.5 times higher with Avandia.

Avandia4

Avandia5

Post Approval Evidence of Increased Bone Fractures in Women

The recently completed ADOPT study found statistically significant increases in total and lower limb fractures in women using Avandia compared to those using either glyburide or metformin.

Avandia6

Avandia7

Pre-Approval and Post-Approval Clinical Evidence of Anemia

  • In pre-approval clinical trials, anemia was reported in 1.9% of patients receiving Avandia as monotherapy compared to 0.7% on placebo.
  • Severe anemia (male: Hct less than 31; female: Hct less than 28) was seen in clinical trials in 9/2,121 patients on rosiglitazone, 0/485 patients given placebo. A lesser degree of anemia was seen in many more patients.
  • Anemia was seen most commonly in combination therapy with rosiglitazone plus metformin (7.1%) compared to those receiving placebo plus metformin (2.2%).

Post-approval adverse reaction reports included 407 cases of anemia in patients using Avandia and 26 in patients using Glucotrol for an adjusted reporting rate of 13.3 times higher for Avandia.

In patients already damaged by heart failure or other cardiac risks of this drug, the addition of anemia can significantly worsen their clinical condition.

Macular Edema

Although one of the major worries as far as microvascular complications of diabetes is visual impairment, not only does Avandia lack evidence of improving this situation but, through a mechanism related to heart failure and fluid accumulation, many patients have developed macular edema—swelling in the critical macular portion of the retina—with Avandia with concomitant, usually reversible, damage to their vision.

Post-approval adverse reaction reports included 83 cases of macular edema in patients using Avandia and two in patients using Glucotrol, for an adjusted reporting rate of 35.3 times higher for Avandia.

Summary

In a recent editorial in the New England Journal of Medicine, Dr. David Nathan, a diabetes expert from the Mass General Hospital wrote:

In theory, newer classes of antidiabetes medications might be welcome additions to the existing armamentarium; however, those that have been developed recently are generally no more potent, and often less effective in lowering glycemia, than the three oldest classes (insulin, the sulfonylureas, and the biguanides), all of which are more than 50 years old.

Moreover, the newer classes are uniformly more expensive and are associated with adverse effects — some that are shared by the older drugs, but others that are new.

He added that “The failure of clinicians and their patients with diabetes to implement currently available interventions aggressively and effectively is, I suspect, the major barrier to good care. This problem will not be fixed by making more medications available.”

Our answer to the question, "Does the overall risk-benefit profile of Avandia support its continued marketing in the US?" is clearly no.

There is no evidence of any uniquely beneficial clinical outcome for Avandia and growing evidence in multiple organ systems (cardiac, liver, bone, bone marrow) of unique risks. If this drug were up for approval today, based on what is now known, it would be summarily rejected. There should not be a double standard for removing it from the market.

Public Citizen is currently preparing a petition to the FDA to ban Avandia.


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Despite evidence, only 1 FDA Committee Member argued for Withdrawal of Avandia

August 3 2007, 3:03 PM 

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601109&sid=ayTrc_5Fj_1w&refer=home

Glaxo Avandia FDA Adversity Fuels Doubts of Comeback (Update2)
By Andrea Gerlin

Aug. 1 (Bloomberg) -- GlaxoSmithKline Plc convinced a U.S. regulatory panel this week to keep its best-selling diabetes drug, Avandia, on the market. Now comes the hard part: persuading doctors to use a medicine linked to heart attacks.

The U.S. Food and Drug ['Trust us - we know whats good for you!'] Administration committee of advisers said this week that the diabetes pill should carry new warnings about cardiovascular risks. Glaxo shares had their biggest gain in two years yesterday after the advisory panel decided not to recommend the withdrawal of Avandia, which brought in $3.3 billion in 2006 for the London-based company, Europe's largest drugmaker.

To hold onto even a portion of that revenue, Glaxo will have to spend more on marketing a product that analysts had estimated would generate $6 billion by 2011. Glaxo shares may resume a two- month decline that began in May as the company struggles for enough Avandia sales to keep profit growing.

``Glaxo will probably receive a black-box warning and the sales will probably not recover to the previous level,'' Pascale Boyer Barresi, an analyst at Bordier & Cie in Geneva, said in an interview.

Avandia sales ``will probably recover 10 to 15 percent, but the decline was so far I think once doctors have changed their patients, they will not switch back,'' he said.

A black-box in the drug's prescribing information is the FDA's sternest. While some of the advisers called for the high alert, the committee didn't vote to recommend it. The agency usually follows advisory panel rulings.

Committee Vote

The FDA committee voted 22-1 to keep Avandia on the market and 20-3 that evidence shows the drug adds to the risks of heart attacks. The panel was seeking to resolve questions raised by a May 21 report in the New England Journal of Medicine that linked the medicine to a 43 percent increased risk of heart attacks.

Glaxo shares were unchanged at 1,255 pence in London, after closing at a two-year low of 1,215 pence on July 30, the day of the hearing. The share decline since the May report has cut 12.3 billion pounds ($25.1 billion) from Glaxo's market value.

Advisory committee members said they weren't convinced evidence from studies supported pulling the drug off the market, even if the pill increases a patient's chances of heart attacks. They said heightened warnings should help doctors.

Two FDA safety officials argued for removing Avandia from the market. They said the treatment raised cardiovascular risks for diabetics, whose chances of developing heart complications are already elevated. The officials also said continuing studies would probably never remove doubts about the product.

Takeda's Actos

Physicians are turning to a similar drug, Takeda Pharmaceutical Co.'s Actos, and newer medications from Merck & Co. and Eli Lilly & Co.

``Until that data comes in, it's going to be hard to start new people on Avandia,'' said Stuart Weiss, a New York University Medical Center endocrinologist. Weiss said he wouldn't stop prescribing Avandia for patients on the drug whose diabetes is controlled.

Glaxo has experience trying to revive sales of a tainted drug. Its Lotronex for chronic diarrhea was pulled in November 2000 after it was linked to patient deaths. The product was reintroduced at a lower dose and with restrictions two years later. It had sales of about $12 million last year, far below the $1 billion a year analysts initially estimated.

New prescriptions of Avandia plummeted 45 percent in the U.S. after the May report, according to data from Fairfield, Connecticut-based IMS Health Inc. and Citigroup Inc. in New York. Sales of Avandia fell 22 percent in the second quarter, Glaxo said in its earnings announcement on July 25.

Broad Portfolio

Glaxo Chief Executive Officer Jean-Pierre ['You can trust me, I'm your friendly GSK CEO and I'm earning a fortune regardless!'] Garnier told investors July 25 that Avandia's U.S. sales accounted for less than 5 percent of revenue and that the company has a ``broad'' portfolio of other drugs. Garnier pointed to six products the company has introduced this year and 25 experimental ones that have the potential to reach the market by 2009.

``There's a lot more to GSK than Avandia,'' Garnier said in a conference call with journalists.

Analysts said Glaxo will face challenges in keeping profit rising until it introduces new products. Asthma inhaler Advair, the company's biggest drug, faces new competition in the U.S. after London-based AstraZeneca Plc introduced the Symbicort inhaler last month.

Glaxo has said it doesn't consider Symbicort a threat because Advair has performed well against the rival in Europe. AstraZeneca said its product brought in $30 million in the first month and more than half of insured Americans now have access to the drug through their health plans.

Cervical Cancer

Glaxo is also trying to catch Merck & Co. and partner Sanofi-Aventis SA, which began selling a competing cervical- cancer vaccine, Gardasil, in the U.S., Europe and Australia in 2006. Analysts predict revenue from Gardasil will reach $1.5 billion this year for Whitehouse Station, New Jersey-based Merck,

Glaxo won approval for its vaccine, Cervarix, in Australia in May and preliminary clearance in Europe on July 18. The company expects a decision on Cervarix from the FDA by January 2008. Meanwhile, revenue from the antidepressant Wellbutrin XL and Zofran for nausea are declining because of generic rivals.

Glaxo is waiting for the FDA's final ruling on Avandia before deciding what to do next, company spokesman Philip Thomson said. The agency still needs to determine the label.

``We're trying to see how the dust settles with the FDA,'' Thomson said. ``In the meantime, we will continue the dialogue with doctors.''

To contact the reporter on this story: Andrea Gerlin in London agerlin@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: August 1, 2007 11:49 EDT "


 
 
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Prenatal Antidepressants (not depression) Linked to Preterm Births

August 17 2007, 3:34 PM 

Prenatal Antidepressants Linked to Preterm Births

http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2007/8/17/83755.shtml?s=he

NewsMax.com Wires
Friday, Aug. 17, 2007

Antidepressant drug use during pregnancy, but not depression itself, is associated with an increased risk of preterm birth and lower fetal age at delivery, according to results of a study published in the American Journal of Psychiatry.

"Depressive symptoms are not uncommon during pregnancy, and...symptoms may occur more frequently during pregnancy than in the postpartum period," write Dr. Rita Suri and colleagues from the University of California, Los Angeles. Depression during pregnancy and just after delivery "has been associated with low maternal weight gain, increased frequency of cigarette, alcohol, and substance use, and ambivalence about the pregnancy."

To further investigate, the researchers examined the effects of maternal depression and antidepressant drug use on fetal age and risk of preterm birth in a study of 90 pregnant women.

The women were divided into three groups: 49 women had major depressive disorder and were treated with antidepressant medication for more than 50 percent of their pregnancy; 22 women had major depressive disorder and were briefly treated or not treated with antidepressants during pregnancy; and a comparison group of 19 healthy pregnant women.

The average fetal age at birth was 38.5, 39.4, and 39.7 weeks in the three groups, respectively. The groups also differed in the rates of preterm birth (14.3 percent, 0 percent, and 5.3 percent) and rates of admission to the special care nursery (21 percent, 9 percent, and 0 percent).

No significant between-group differences were observed in actual infant birth weights or Apgar scores.

Based on these findings, the presence of depression per se during pregnancy did not adversely affect outcomes. "This result was surprising to us, as we had anticipated that depression and anxiety during pregnancy would be associated with an increased risk of preterm birth," Suri and colleagues write

"The two groups of women with depression -- those who were treated with antidepressants and those who were not -- had similar degrees of depression and anxiety during pregnancy," they note.

These findings suggest that antidepressant use, rather than mild-to-moderate depression, was associated with lower fetal age and an increased risk of preterm birth.

SOURCE: American Journal of Psychiatry, August 2007. "



 
 
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