I normally only do one eye opener a week, but
this report leaked to the New York Times is beyond infuriating: Research
ties diabetes drug to heart woes. Our government needs to stop covering for
murderers and change its laws to prosecute them. If you know of someone taking
Avandia, please send this report to them. Type II Diabetes is so treatable,
reversible and preventable just be eating healing foods. It seems that people
taking just about any drug are playing roulette. It is time to take your health
into your own hands.
Here is the full report:
Research Ties Diabetes Drug
to Heart Woes
Published:
February 19, 2010
J.B.
Reed/Bloomberg News
Avandia was
once one of the world's biggest-selling drugs.
The
reports, obtained by The New York Times, say that if every diabetic now taking
Avandia were instead given a similar pill named Actos, about 500 heart attacks
and 300 cases of heart failure would be averted every month because Avandia can
hurt the heart. Avandia, intended to treat Type 2
diabetes, is known as rosiglitazone and was linked to 304 deaths during the
third quarter of 2009.
“Rosiglitazone should be
removed from the market,” one report, by Dr. David Graham and Dr. Kate Gelperin
of the Food and
Drug Administration, concludes. Both authors recommended that Avandia be
withdrawn.
The internal F.D.A. reports
are part of a fierce debate within the agency over what to do about Avandia,
manufactured by GlaxoSmithKline. Some agency officials want the drug withdrawn
because they believe there is a safer alternative; others insist that studies
of the drug provide contradictory information and that Avandia should continue
to be an option for doctors and patients. GlaxoSmithKline said that it had
studied Avandia extensively and that “scientific evidence simply does not
establish that Avandia increases” the risk of heart attacks.
The battle has been brewing
for years but has been brought to a head by disagreement over a new clinical
trial and a Senate investigation that concluded that GlaxoSmithKline should
have warned patients earlier of the drug’s potential risks.
Avandia was once one of the
biggest-selling drugs in the world. Driven in part by a multimillion-dollar
advertising campaign, sales were $3.2 billion in 2006. But a 2007 study by a Cleveland Clinic
cardiologist suggesting that the drug harmed the heart prompted the F.D.A. to
issue a warning, and sales plunged. A committee of independent experts found in
2007 that Avandia might increase the risk of heart attack
but recommended that it remain on the market, and an F.D.A. oversight board
voted 8 to 7 to accept that advice.
Hundreds of thousands still
take the medicine, although some top endocrinologists say they have sworn off
the drug.
Since 2007, more studies have
been done. In a December 2009 internal memorandum, Dr. Janet Woodcock, director
of the F.D.A.’s drug center, wrote that “there are multiple conflicting
opinions” about Avandia within the agency, and she ordered officials to
assemble another advisory committee, expected this summer, to reconsider
whether the drug should be sold.
“I await the recommendations
of the advisory committee,” the agency’s commissioner, Dr. Margaret Hamburg,
said Friday night. “Meanwhile, I am reviewing the inquiry made by Senators
Baucus and Grassley and I am reaching out to ensure that I have a complete understanding
and awareness of all of the data and issues involved.”
The bipartisan multiyear
Senate investigation — whose results are expected to be released publicly on
Monday but which were also obtained by The Times — sharply criticizes
GlaxoSmithKline, saying it failed to warn patients years earlier that Avandia
was potentially deadly.
“Instead, G.S.K. executives
attempted to intimidate independent physicians, focused on strategies to
minimize or misrepresent findings that Avandia may increase cardiovascular
risk, and sought ways to downplay findings that a competing drug might reduce
cardiovascular risk,” concludes the report, which was overseen by Senator Max Baucus, a Montana Democrat, and
Senator Charles E. Grassley, an
Iowa Republican.
Mr. Baucus said of the
report, “Patients trust drug companies with their health and their lives, and
GlaxoSmithKline abused that trust.”
In response, GlaxoSmithKline
said that it disagreed with the Senate investigation’s conclusions. The company
said that it could not comment on internal F.D.A. documents but that “the
official ruling from F.D.A. is that Avandia remain on the market.”
In the wake of the
controversy, agency officials ordered GlaxoSmithKline to undertake a study
comparing how many heart attacks, strokes and heart-related deaths occur among
patients given either Avandia, Actos or a placebo. Studies suggest that Actos,
made by Takeda, lowers blood sugar as well as Avandia but without hurting the heart
as much.
But Dr. Graham and Dr.
Gelperin, working in the F.D.A.’s office of surveillance and epidemiology,
argued in two separate internal reports that the new GlaxoSmithKline study,
called TIDE, is “unethical and exploitative” because patients given Avandia
face far greater risks than those given Actos, with no promise of any
additional benefit. The trial may include patients who have had heart attacks
or chest pains even though some foreign drug authorities have warned against
Avandia’s use by precisely such patients, the reports note.
“Although the proposed TIDE
trial is motivated by a desire for definitive answers regarding the
cardiovascular safety of the drug rosiglitazone, the safety of the study itself
cannot be assured and is not acceptable,” one of the reports concludes.
These concerns, in internal
reports dated October 2008 but not made public until now, were later overruled
by other agency officials, and GlaxoSmithKline is currently enrolling patients
in the TIDE trial. The trial is not expected to be completed until 2020,
although the company is hoping to report some results to the F.D.A. by 2014.
The company’s patent on Avandia expires in 2012, and generic versions will
probably swallow most remaining profits.
In a letter sent Thursday to
Dr. Hamburg, the Food and Drug Administration commissioner, Mr. Baucus and Mr.
Grassley asked “what steps the F.D.A. has taken to protect patients in the TIDE
trial” and said the trial’s patients had never been told about the concerns
raised by the agency’s own safety officers.
Mr. Grassley said the
internal agency battle showed that the agency needed to be restructured to give
more power to safety officials like Dr. Graham and Dr. Gelperin over their
counterparts who approve medicines and deal more directly with drug makers.
“It doesn’t make any sense to
have these experts who study drugs after they have been on the market for
several years under the thumb of the officials who approved the drug in the
first place and have a natural interest in defending that decision,” Mr.
Grassley said. “The Avandia case may be the most alarming example of the
problem with this setup.”
The question of when and how
to communicate possible drug risks has long bedeviled drug makers and
regulators. Hints are common that drugs may cause injuries; thousands of drug
injury reports pour into the Food and Drug Administration every week. For
example, Avandia ranked first among all prescribed drugs in the number of
serious, disabling and fatal problems — including 304 deaths — reported to the
agency in the third quarter of 2009, according to an analysis done by the
Institute for Safe Medication Practice, a drug safety oversight group.
But companies say that such
reports do not offer proof of a problem and that highlighting them can scare
patients away from needed treatment, so they often argue that more certainty is
needed before alarms are raised. GlaxoSmithKline said a “vast majority” of the
recent reports regarding Avandia was related to litigation.
The Senate investigation —
the result of years of digging through more than 250,000 internal company
documents — concludes that GlaxoSmithKline and by extension the F.D.A. delayed
far too long in this process.
In November 2003, for
instance, the company completed a study in which diabetics given Avandia had
far more heart problems than those given placebos. Two months later, the World Health Organization
sent the company an alert linking Avandia to heart ailments. In a June 2004
meeting, the company’s Global Safety Board said a hard look should be taken at
all Avandia clinical trials for more signs of heart problems, documents show.
European regulators had
earlier ordered GlaxoSmithKline to conduct a study — called the Record trial —
to examine Avandia’s heart risks because hints of these problems appeared in
the company’s earliest trials.. But the Senate report shows that by at least
2004, company executives were aware that the Record trial was going so poorly
that it would never answer the heart question with any kind of certainty.
So company executives
gathered dozens of Avandia studies and sifted their combined data. Called a
meta-analysis, this combined look found first in 2005 and in an updated look in
2006 that Avandia increased the risks of serious heart problems by nearly a
third, the Senate investigation shows. Because two-thirds of diabetics die of
heart problems, this was hugely worrying.
In 2005, executives revealed
the results of their meta-analysis to the F.D.A., and in 2006 they provided the
agency with the underlying data.
Two large company-sponsored
trials — called Dream and Adopt — were published near the end of 2006, and each
provided more hints that Avandia hurts the heart, the documents show. In a March
2007 meeting of the company’s Diabetes Franchise Cardiology Advisory Board,
advisers called the safety worries found in these many studies “disquieting.”
Negotiations with agency officials about how and whether to alert the public
continued.
Meanwhile, the company
continued to market and advertise Avandia aggressively. The Senate inquiry
concludes that the company threatened doctors who suggested in public that
Avandia might have serious risks.
In 1999, for instance, Dr.
John Buse, a professor of medicine at the University of North
Carolina, gave presentations at scientific meetings suggesting that Avandia
had heart risks. GlaxoSmithKline executives complained to his supervisor and
hinted of legal action against him, according to the Senate inquiry. Dr. Buse
eventually signed a document provided by GlaxoSmithKline agreeing not to
discuss his worries about Avandia publicly. The report cites a separate episode
of intimidation of investigators at the University of
Pennsylvania.
GlaxoSmithKline said that it
“does not condone any effort to silence” scientific debate, and that it
disagrees with allegations that it tried to silence Dr. Buse. Still, it said
the situation “could have been handled differently.”

Comments