FDA approved Big Pharma drugs without effectiveness data
Wednesday, May 04, 2011 by: S. L. Baker, features writer
(NaturalNews) Consumers constantly are told how complicated it is to get a
new drug on the market. After all, researchers have to jump through all sorts of
hoops to assure safety before new therapies are approved for the public, right?
It turns out they may be missing some of those hoops or not jumping through some
of the most important ones.
In fact, huge red flags are being raised about how drugs are tested and approved
in two new studies, including one just published in the May 4th issue of the
Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA).
A case in point: it turns out that only about half of the new prescription
medications pushed onto the market over the last decade had the proper data
together for the U.S. Food and Drug Administration - yet the FDA approved them
anyhow.
The information in question is known specifically as comparative effectiveness
data. And it is - or should be - a very big deal when it comes to deciding
whether a drug should be approved and sold to the public.
According to the Institute of Medicine, comparative effectiveness data is
defined as the "generation and synthesis of evidence that compares the benefits
and harms of alternative methods to prevent, diagnose, treat, and monitor a
clinical condition or to improve the delivery of care."
In other words, how does a new drug stack up against other treatments - is it
more beneficial, safer, or does it have more potential dangers?
Comparative effectiveness information on drugs is especially important when
doctors are making decisions about whether to prescribe a med, and to whom, soon
after a drug is approved. That's because when Big Pharma medications first hit
the market, physicians are relying on what drug companies and the FDA tell them
about a medication. It takes a while for real life reports to come in as people
report reactions, side effects (including deaths related to a drug) to become
clearer.
Also, there are usually not data from large head-to-head trials comparing
multiple treatments available when a medication first hits the marketplace.
"Comparative effectiveness is taking on an increasingly important role in U.S.
health care, yet little is known about the availability of comparative efficacy
data for drugs at the time of their approval in the United States," according to
background information in the new JAMA study.
It's not like there's not money to come up with this information, either. In
2009, Congress allocated $1.1 billion of taxpayers' money to comparative
effectiveness research.
For the JAMA study, researcher Nikolas H. Goldberg and colleagues from Brigham
and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, investigated the
proportion of recently approved drugs that had comparative efficacy data
available at the time they were authorized by the FDA to be sold in the U.S.
They also examined the availability of this information over time and by
therapeutic indication by checking out approval packages publicly available
through the online database of drug products (dubbed new molecular entities,
NMEs, for short) approved by FDA between 2000 and 2010.
The researchers found that only about half of 197 eligible approved NMEs between
2000 and 2010 had comparative efficacy data available at the time they were
approved to be marketed.
Meanwhile, another recent study throws needed light on the limited data behind
the safety and effectiveness of some Big Pharma drugs.
Research led jointly by Alexander Tsai of Harvard University and Nicholas
Rosenlicht of the University of California San Francisco just published in PLoS
Medicine zeroed in on the medication aripiprazole, which is prescribed treating
bipolar disorder.
How was this powerful drug deemed safe and effective? Amazingly, the research
team found the only evidence for the use of this medication came from a single
trial. And, as they described in their paper, the scientists found key
limitations of the drug study that clearly skewed the findings so they appear to
support the use of aripiprazole for bipolar disorder.
Did this stop the FDA from approving the drug? No way. And neither did the fact
that this single, poorly designed trial was sponsored by the drug manufacturer
who produces aripiprazole.
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