Filed at 4:01 p.m. ET
CHICAGO (AP) -- One in five new drugs has serious side effects that
do not show up until well after the medicine has received government
approval, according to a study that exposes what one researcher calls an
alarming game of medical Russian roulette.
The researchers went so far as to suggest that doctors should
prescribe older drugs when possible, unless the new one is truly
superior.
``It's like playing Russian roulette when a doctor prescribes a newly
approved drug that doesn't have a big breakthrough,'' said Dr. Sidney
Wolfe of Public Citizen Health Research Group, one of the researchers
who worked on the study.
Pressure from pharmaceutical companies and doctors' failure to
closely read warning labels are partly to blame, the researchers said.
They said the findings should prompt the Food and Drug Administration to
consider raising its threshold for approving new drugs when safe and
effective alternatives exist.
The findings are based on an analysis of 548 drugs approved from 1975
through 1999. Of these, 56, or more than 10 percent, were later given a
serious-side-effect warning or taken off the market for safety reasons.
The number climbed to approximately 20 percent when researchers took
into account drugs that were approved toward the end of the period
studied.
The study, led by Dr. Karen Lasser of Cambridge Hospital and Harvard
Medical School, appears in Wednesday's Journal of the American Medical
Association.
An accompanying editorial by two FDA experts said the analysis
overstates the problem.
Safety studies that are conducted before a drug wins approval
typically involve a few thousand patients and may not detect all side
effects, especially relatively rare ones, Drs. Robert Temple and Martin
Himmel said.
``Frequent post-marketing label changes are therefore inevitable and
should be anticipated,'' they wrote.
Temple also noted that some medications cause side effects in only
certain groups of patients, such as pregnant women, which does not mean
a drug is dangerous for everyone.
The study analyzed what are known as ``black-box'' warnings published
in the Physicians Desk Reference, a compendium of drugs and labeling
information published annually. Black-box warnings highlight the most
serious side effects.
Sixteen drugs studied were withdrawn from the market, nearly half of
them more than two years after they had won approval.
They include the diabetes drug Rezulin, which was approved in 1997
but has been linked to dozens of cases of fatal liver damage. Lasser
said doctors continued to prescribe it an unsafe manner even after it
was given a black-box warning, and it was ultimately withdrawn from the
market in 2000.
Two allergy drugs, Seldane and Hismanal, were linked with potentially
fatal heart problems in certain patients but were not removed from the
market until several years after receiving black-box warnings.
Most troublesome new drugs do not represent any advance in treatment
and are at best no better than older, safer drugs already on the market,
Wolfe said.
Unless a new drug is a breakthrough, it should be avoided until its
safety record is better known, the researchers said.
``When a drug that comes on the market has a 1-in-5 chance that it's
going to have to be banned or get a black-box warning is pretty
worrisome,'' Wolfe said.
He said the FDA is correct in saying doctors do not pay enough
attention to warning labels, but that is ``all the more reason to do the
right thing on the front end. The remedy should be don't put the drug on
the market unless it's a breakthrough drug.''
The FDA has said that while its drug review process has gotten
shorter in recent years, the procedure is still adequate. But the agency
has expressed concern over doctors not reading drug warning labels
closely.
Temple said that while doctors are getting better at reporting side
effects to the FDA and drug companies, the agency is seeking further
improvements, including a proposal to include a drug's approval date on
packaging inserts.
``I don't think anybody believes that we're absolutely at the best we
can do, but it's better,'' Temple said.
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On the net:
JAMA: http://jama.ama-assn.org
FDA: http://www.fda.gov
Public Citizen:
http://www.citizen.org/hrg