From: rpautrey2 on


Toxic Drugs, Toxic System: Sociologist Predicts Drug Disasters


ScienceDaily (Aug. 5, 2008) — Americans are likely to be exposed to
unacceptable side effects of FDA-approved drugs such as Vioxx in the
future because of fatal flaws in the way new drugs are tested and
marketed, according to research to be presented today at the annual
meeting of the American Sociological Association (ASA).

"Drug disasters are literally built into the current system of drug
testing and approvals in the United States," said Donald Light, the
sociologist who authored the study and a professor of comparative
health policy at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New
Jersey. "Recent changes in the system have only increased the
proportion of new drugs with serious risks."

According to a 1999 report for the Institute of Medicine, adverse drug
reactions (ADRs) are the fourth leading cause of death in the United
States and more than two million serious reactions occur every year.
ADRs can occur for a number of reasons, including improper prescribed
dosage, drug abuse and drug interactions.

Light's analysis identifies the organizational foundations of patient
risk from prescription drugs and suggests institutional reforms to
help avoid or reduce future drug disasters.

According to Light, rather than using current approved drugs as
benchmarks of efficacy, the existing testing system evaluates the
effectiveness of new drugs based on their effects compared to
placebos. Systematic reviews indicate that one in seven new drugs is
superior to existing drugs, but two in every seven new drugs result in
side effects serious enough for action by the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration (FDA), including black box warnings, adverse reaction
warnings, or even withdrawal of the drug.

Based on this system, Light asserts that new drugs are twice as likely
to harm patients as to provide them with benefits superior to existing
drugs.

Light's analysis suggests another flaw lies within the design of
clinical trials. He contends that pharmaceutical companies frequently
design their trails to minimize evidence of toxic side effects. To do
so, they sample from a healthier population atypical of patients who
will actually take the drug, excluding people who are older, poorer or
who have multiple health problems. Trials are run long enough to pick
up main effects but not to detect some long term side effects.
Approvals are based on these data; so drugs with harmful effects
sometimes get through.

"Based on our current system, the designation of 'safe and effective'
on today's new drugs could be replaced with, 'apparently safe based on
incomplete information, and more effective than a placebo,'" Light
said.

With regard to government oversight, Light cites serious under-funding
of the FDA, which creates a dependency on the pharmaceutical industry—
the industry FDA regulates—to pay its staff. In return for drug
company funding, Light says, the industry expects faster reviews, but
faster reviews potentially fail to identify serious long-term side
effects.

"Speed-up reviews for safety have more than tripled the number of
'black box warnings' of side effects or withdrawals after drugs are on
the market," Light said. "Despite recent reforms to strengthen the
FDA's role in protecting the public from harmful drugs, the harm-
benefit ratio is worsening due to these reviews and relaxed rules that
allow companies to promote drugs for unapproved uses."

The paper, "Institutional Foundations of the Vioxx Disaster," will be
presented on Sunday, Aug. 3, at 2:30 p.m. in the Sheraton Boston at
the American Sociological Association's 103rd annual meeting. Light
will identify eight institutional foundations for future drug
disasters, and will suggest multiple reforms to improve the U.S. drug
approval system.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Adapted from materials provided by American Sociological Association,
via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

American Sociological Association (2008, August 5). Toxic Drugs, Toxic
System: Sociologist Predicts Drug Disasters. ScienceDaily. Retrieved
August 6, 2008, from

http://www.sciencedaily.com­ /releases/2008/08/080804100304.htm