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Depression Meds: Rigging the definition to boost profits New Statesman (London) 11 March 2002 The  New  Statesman  Special  Report  -  The  rebranding  of a disease Should  we  trust  the scientific data on the effects of drugs? Not if the case of depression, for which pharmaceutical companies found a new definition, is anything to go by. Jerome Burne reports If  the  directors  of drug companies are in the habit of taking their own   medicines,   then   consumption  of  anti-depressants  in  their boardrooms should have soared last month. Not least to show solidarity in  the  face  of  growing  concerns  that Prozac-type anti-depression drugs,  one  of the biggest pharmaceutical success stories of the past decade, may be not only dangerous to some, but also addictive. The magazine Health, Which came out with a warning that patients being offered  anti-depressants  were  often  not told "about issues such as withdrawal  problems  or  .  . . a possible risk of increased suicidal behaviour",   and  the  Royal  College  of  Psychiatrists  issued  new guidelines,  saying  that  only 50 per cent of patients would be "much improved" after taking anti-depressants, which is little better than a placebo.  Meanwhile,  in the United States, the issue of addiction was highlighted  when the Food and Drug Administration ordered the company GlaxoSmithKline to warn doctors prescribing the drug Seroxat about the possibility of dependency. The company was also found in breach of the industry code by describing problems with withdrawal as "very rare". All of this came in the wake of a court case last June, brought by the family  of  a  man  who,  a  few  days after being put on the drug for sleeping  problems,  had shot his daughter, his grandchildren and then himself. The court agreed with the family’s claim that Seroxat (one of a  class of drugs known as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, or SSRIs)  had contributed to his behaviour, and awarded them $6.4m. This was  the  second case linking SSRIs with suicide to come to court, but more than 200 have been settled out of court. What  makes  this all the more alarming is that the drugs involved are so widely used – prescriptions for all SSRIs in the UK run at about 10 million.  They  are  increasingly  prescribed  for  a  wide variety of conditions,  such  as  skin complaints, pre- menstrual tension, weight loss  and  attention-deficit  disorder.  But  it  also raises the more important  and  wider question: can we trust the drug companies? Or is there  a  strong possibility that their business practices could leave both  doctors  and  patients  with  no way of telling just how safe or effective our medications are? When  it  comes  to  spin, the drug companies make the government look clumsy  and  amateurish. At the heart of the worries over SSRIs is the growing  belief  that the drug companies have been less than honest in their account of the risks involved. But it is not just SSRIs that are given  a  positive  gloss  when  the evidence points the other way. In January, for instance, Swiss prosecutors began a criminal inquiry into the pharmaceutical giant Bayer AG, "on suspicion of fraud and grievous bodily  damage",  following  the  recall last year of the cholesterol- lowering  drug  cerivastatin (otherwise known as Lipobay in Europe and Baycol  in  the US). The prosecutors are accusing Bayer of suppressing vital  information about the drug’s potentially fatal interaction with another drug, which has been linked to more than 50 deaths. Could  the  drug companies do such a thing? The editors of the world’s top  11  medical  journals,  including the Lancet, the British Medical Journal  and  the New England Journal of Medicine, certainly think so. Last September, the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors issued  a  joint  statement  calling for more openness in the way drug companies report their results and less readiness to hide unfavourable ones.  The  editors  declared  that  they will now "require authors to attest that they had full access to all of the data in [a] study and . .  .  [to]  take complete responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis". The  point  about  having "full access to all of the data" is crucial, because  it  lies  at  the root of how science works. Only if they can look at the raw data are other scientists able to judge how reasonable is the interpretation. But all too often, the results from drug trials are  presented  in  the  form of tables, and the drug companies refuse access  to  the  raw  data  on  the  grounds  that  it is commercially sensitive. However,  the  concerns  of  the  journal  editors  on this point were clearly  not  enough.  In  February,  the  UK’s  National Institute of Clinical   Excellence   (Nice)   claimed  that  "drug  companies  have successfully  withheld important data". Gauging the efficacy of a drug is  fraught  with  problems, declared Dr Iain Chalmers of the Cochrane Centre,  an  organisation  set  up to evaluate the efficacy of medical treatments,  "because negative results are rarely published in medical journals". The moral vacuum that results from constant spinning is threatening to suck  in  not  just the academics who are paid to do the work for drug companies, but the whole process of scientific medicine. In an article last  September  entitled  "Dancing  with the porcupine", the Canadian Medical  Association Journal attempted to set out some principles that ought  to  apply  when pharmaceutical companies are funding academics. The  authors  start  by recognising that such alliances are inherently tricky:  "The  duty of the universities is to seek the truth. The duty of  the  pharmaceutical  companies is to make money." But, and this is the  important  bit,  "if  either abandons its fundamental mission, it ultimately  fails".  A broke drug company or a discredited academic is no use to anyone. The  attempt to hammer out some sort of guidelines was set against the background of at least two highly publicised Canadian cases where drug companies   had  used  "intimidating  tactics"  that  had  "profoundly affected"  researchers’ lives. One involved a lawsuit by Bristol-Myers Squibb against the Canadian Co-ordinating Office for Health Technology Assessment  to  suppress  a  report  on the cholesterol-lowering drugs statins.  The  other  was  the  legal  threat by AstraZeneca against a researcher   at  Ontario’s  McMaster  University  for  her  review  of medications for stomach disorders. Even  if  matters  don’t  get  as far as the courts, "industry funding creates  an  incentive  to  promote  the  positive  and  suppress  the negative",  says  the  journal.  An  example is the "landmark article" showing  that  industry-sponsored research into certain heart drugs is more likely to be supportive of their use than is independently funded research.  The  conclusion  argues  for the drawing up of some sort of industry/university  contract  containing clauses giving academics the right  to "disclose potentially harmful clinical effects immediately", for  a  surcharge  on  contracts  to  fund  a regulatory body, for the setting up of an ombudsman, and so on. All  very  well  and good, but getting regulatory bodies to respond to concerns  about  some drugs can be hard work. That, at least, has been the experience of the psychiatrist Dr David Healy who, since 1999, has been  engaged  in  extensive  correspondence  with  the UK’s Medicines Control  Agency  (MCA)  over  the  links  between  SSRIs,  suicide and addiction.  Their exchange of letters now runs to more than 100 pages, with  the  majority  of  that coming from Healy. As of last month, the agency’s  position  is that there is no cause for concern and that all the warnings that are needed are in place. What  makes  Healy’s  campaign  of particular interest is, first, that he’s  no maverick, driven by a belief in herbs or the healing power of madness.  He  is  a mainstream biological psychiatrist and director of the North Wales Department of Psychological Medicine in Bangor, he has written   a   highly  acclaimed  history  of  anti-depressants  -  The Anti-depressant Era, published by Harvard University Press – and he is the  author  of  more  than 100 scientific papers. But he is concerned that  patients  and  the profession are not being told the truth about the risks. His  campaign also gains added weight from his experience as an expert witness  in two American court cases involving suicide and SSRIs. As a result,  he has seen previously unpublished data on trials carried out by  the  drug  companies  on  healthy  volunteers. His analysis of the secret  data,  the sort that drug companies usually refuse to release, shows  that about 25 per cent of healthy volunteers given the drug had some  sort  of  unpleasant psychological reaction. "That suggests that the  likelihood of someone committing suicide during their first month of  treatment  with  Prozac  is  ten  times  greater than if they were untreated,"  he  says.  "That is a level of risk approaching that of a smoker’s likelihood of developing lung cancer." This  suggests  an astonishing gap between what the drug companies say publicly  and what their own data shows. As a striking illustration of this gap between secret and public knowledge, Healy is fond of quoting a  story  from an American newspaper, the Boston Globe, which appeared in May 2000. It concerned a new form of Prozac, known as R-fluoxetine, which had been patented in 1993 (US patent no 5,708,035) and which Eli Lilly  planned  to  market when the existing patent ran out in 2002. A patent  application  requires  that you say why your new version is an improvement.  So  what were the benefits of R-fluoxetine? "It will not produce several existing side effects, including akathsia [agitation], suicidal thoughts and self-mutilation . . . one of its [Prozac's] more … read more »

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> Depression Meds: Rigging the definition to boost profits > New Statesman (London) > 11 March 2002 > The  New  Statesman  Special  Report  -  The  rebranding  of a disease

Very good article – thank you – hope it gets replays :-) Squiggles

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