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http://www.latimes.com/health/consumer/matters/20010618/t000050547.html
When Hype Stands In for Solid Science
By TRUDY LIEBERMAN
Over
the last decade some 30,000 women with late-stage breast cancer received an
expensive therapy known as autologous bone marrow transplantation. The
treatment, costing $50,000 to $100,000, involved high doses of chemotherapy and
the transplant of bone marrow cells in an attempt to arrest the disease. It
offered hope but little evidence that it would prolong or improve the quality
of life.
Doctors, hospitals, patients
and their advocates, all with a stake in the procedure, fought for its use
while insurers resisted on the grounds that it was experimental--that there was
little proof that it worked. Battles between insurers and patients over the
procedure made national headlines: A Southern California jury in 1993 awarded
millions to the family of a breast cancer patient who died after her HMO
refused to pay for ABMT treatment.
Two years ago, results
from four clinical trials showed that insurance companies--some of which had
bowed to public pressure and had begun paying for the procedure--had been right
all along. The lack of evidence for ABMT is hardly an isolated example. If you
look closely at many of the things done to patients, the evidence for their use
often is soft or even nonexistent. For decades physicians placed tubes in the
ears of kids with chronic ear infections in the belief that they would improve
hearing and language development. A recent review of the evidence, however,
shows that tubes don't have much of an effect after all.
Several studies show
that the proportion of medical interventions firmly grounded in evidence is
much smaller than most people realize. "The public is shocked when they
hear that 80% of medical practice is not based on evidence," says Dr.
Gregg Meyer, who directs the Center for Quality Improvement and Patient Safety
at the federal Agency for HealthCare Research and Quality. Much of what doctors
do is based on opinion and consensus but that doesn't always produce the best
outcomes and highest quality care. However, says Meyer, consensus "isn't
always bad. There has never been a randomized controlled trial of penicillin
for strep throat but we know it works."
But sometimes consensus
is scary, especially when sellers of new treatments, tests, drugs and devices
take to the airways to shape public opinion. Doctors are part of the public
too. With help from the media, sellers sometimes promote treatments whether or
not research has proved them effective. In 20 seconds Oprah can generate more
demand for a medical procedure than one or two well-done clinical trials
reported in the New England Journal of Medicine. Hype, promotion and public
relations can overwhelm whatever science there is, and if there isn't any, they
become a substitute.
The arthritis drug
Celebrex and its cousin Vioxx, which is prescribed for arthritis as well as
acute pain, show what can happen. Celebrex is now the sixth bestselling drug,
generating more than $4 billion in sales since its debut in early 1999.
"The question
prescribers have to ask is how did Celebrex reach $1 billion in sales at a time
when there wasn't a single controlled trial published that looked at the
effectiveness in treating arthritis and pain compared to similar drugs,"
says Larry Sasich, a pharmacist who works with the Public Citizen Health
Research Group. "What sources of information do prescribers use to choose
drugs? In the case of Celebrex, because there was no science, the decision had
to be based on promotional materials."
Meyer says his
6-year-old son, who watches fewer than three hours of television each week, can
hum the Celebrex song. So can I, and I watch almost no TV and have no need for
the drug. Doctors can, too, and that's when marketing that implies greater
safety or efficacy than may be warranted becomes dangerous.
When Celebrex came on
the market, Searle, which then made the drug, pointed to clinical trials that
showed the drug caused fewer stomach ulcers than comparable medicines, known as
nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, or NSAIDs. Indeed, its apparent
gastrointestinal safety became its promotional raison d'etre.
However, the studies
did not reflect strong enough evidence for the FDA to allow Searle to market
the drug without a warning--also carried by other NSAIDs--that it could cause
gastrointestinal bleeding and should be avoided by people with severe liver and
kidney problems.
At the time, a study at
the University of Pennsylvania, which was funded by Searle, discussed the
possible risk of blood clotting that could result in heart attacks and strokes
and recommended larger clinical trials. The study's senior author said the
findings raised a red flag. But Searle dismissed the study as reaching
"highly speculative conclusions." That study got little media
attention.
The science is
beginning to accumulate on Celebrex and Vioxx, which is manufactured by Merck.
A study reported last July in the Annals of Internal Medicine found that both
drugs reduced kidney function in older people who were otherwise healthy. And a
scientifically valid study of Celebrex in the Journal of the American Medical
Assn. last fall raised questions about its gastrointestinal advantages compared
to similar drugs.
"There was no
significant safety advantage in the GI tract," says Dr. M. Michael Wolfe,
chief of gastroenterology at Boston Medical Center and a member of FDA's
advisory panel on gastrointestinal drugs. However, Judith Glova, a spokeswoman
for Pharmacia, which now makes Celebrex, said that "additional analysis
showed clinically meaningful results."
A trial involving Vioxx
found that it was easier on the stomach than naproxen, another NSAID sold under
the brand names Naprosyn and Aleve. But this study raised a new red flag. Patients
taking Vioxx had four times the risk of heart attacks as patients taking
naproxen. "We're not sure whether Vioxx was associated with more heart
attacks or naproxen was acting as aspirin to prevent heart attacks," Wolfe
says.
Although warnings have
surfaced, early hype for the drugs may be getting in the way of sound medical
judgment. A doctor friend of mine tells of an 80-year-old patient who was in a
rehabilitation facility after a minor fall. She had a history of arthritis,
heart and kidney problems. The facility's cardiologist prescribed Celebrex, and
soon the woman developed symptoms of heart and renal failure.
When my friend asked
doctors at the facility if Celebrex could have caused her problem, at first
they said no, replying that the drug did not have a "side effect
profile." Later they conceded it could have been the culprit. "This
fits the definition of an adverse drug event that went unrecognized," my
friend says. Apparently doctors were confusing the advertised gastrointestinal
advantages of the drug with other potential problems that received little
publicity.
More than a decade ago,
David Eddy, a physician and medical commentator, wrote in the journal Health
Affairs: "Physicians can do more to admit the existence of uncertainty
both to themselves and to their patients. While this will undoubtedly be
unsettling, it is honest, and it opens the way for a more intensive search for
ways to reduce uncertainty." Patients, he said, "can push the process
by asking questions. There are few things better than asking questions to force
research to get the answers."
With the explosion in
technology and sophisticated marketing techniques, Eddy's comments are even
more relevant today.
* * *
Trudy
Lieberman is the author of "Consumer Reports Complete Guide to Health
Services for Seniors" (Three Rivers Press, 2000). Send comments to: trudyal530@aol.com. Health Matters appears
on the third Monday of the month.
Lieberman is also director of
the Center for Consumer Health Choices at Consumers Union, www.consumersunion.org
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