Muzi.com News Gallery Library Forum Celebrity Movies Chinastar Regions Channels
Set Home|Subscribe|Premium Home|MyMuzi

Home | Headlines | Photos | Region | People | Time | Events | Business | Sports | Showbiz | IT | Politics | Military | Society | Education | Life | Health | Most-viewed Story | Most-viewed Coverage
  Muzi.com : Muzi (English) : News
  FDA deadlines may impact drug safety
Last updated: 2008-03-26


FDA deadlines may impact drug safety
2008-03-26

Category
Pain Killers
Event
U.S. Painkiller Crisis
University
Harvard University
Drugs
Vioxx
Category
FDA
Vioxx, Bextra, Rezulin, Baycol. Looking at drugs yanked off the market, Harvard researchers found a disturbing pattern: Medicines approved right on deadline by the Food and Drug Administration are more likely to cause safety problems later than those cleared with more time to spare.

Congress set strict deadlines for FDA to speed the arrival of new medications, but critics have long complained that the ticking clock spurred a dangerous rush to judgment.

The Harvard analysis of decades of drug approvals, published in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine, provides the first scientific evidence supporting some of those complaints.

The FDA challenged the findings with its own statistics. Still, the study sparked calls to re-examine the balance between speed and safety.

"The article is a wake-up call," said Dr. Steven Nissen, the Cleveland Clinic's influential cardiology chief who helped sound the alarm on the risks of some of those ultimately doomed drugs

"It puts the FDA in a very difficult situation when they're trying to make complex decisions under these very, very tight deadlines," he added. "We've got to reevaluate now whether that's good public policy."

Deadlines were first imposed on FDA by a 1992 law that allowed drug makers to pay millions of dollars in fees directly to the cash-strapped agency so it could hire more reviewers and clear a backlog of pending drug applications. In return, FDA had to make a decision -- either approve or reject -- on 90 percent of all drug candidates within 12 months of their application, or lose money. The deadline was 6 months for drugs so novel or potentially lifesaving to be classified high-priority.

Congress tightened the deadline for most drugs to 10 months in 1997.

Amid concern about risky drugs, Harvard professor Daniel Carpenter took a closer look at the impact. First, he found approval is 3.4 times as likely in the two months leading up to the user-fee deadline as at any other time.

Drugs approved in that just-before-deadline period had a four- to five-fold higher rate of later being withdrawn or requiring serious safety warnings, compared with drugs approved faster -- presumably slam-dunks -- or those that miss the deadline, Carpenter concluded.

The FDA argued the findings weren't accurate, rushing out its own statistics that showed somewhat more withdrawals among drugs approved just before the deadline but not enough to be statistically significant.

"FDA won't approve a drug if we are not ready," said drug chief Dr. Janet Woodcock. "And we have the option of denying approval altogether if there is any question about safety."

But the Harvard researchers in turn rechecked their statistics, which had passed review by the medical journal, and informed FDA they were standing by the findings.

Among on-the-brink approvals that later caused problems: The painkiller Vioxx, pulled off the market in 2004 for increasing the risk of heart attacks and strokes; its competitor Bextra, gone in 2005; the diabetes drug Rezulin, withdrawn in 2000 for liver problems; and cholesterol-lowering Baycol pulled in 2001 for muscle damage.

More recently, the diabetes blockbuster Avandia was linked to heart risks last year, getting a strict new warning label.

Carpenter acknowledged that everybody works under deadlines.

For FDA, "these deadlines are kind of stand-ins for pressure" to approve, he contended.

"FDA staffers by their own admission feel very much under the gun as these deadlines loom," added Dr. Jerry Avorn of Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, who co-authored the study. "If they're forced to make decisions prematurely, they may not make the right decisions. That needs to be debated openly."

In today's tight budget climate, industry user fees are unlikely to be replaced with taxpayer dollars. Congress reaffirmed the user-fee provisions last year, and it's unclear if lawmakers would revisit the deadline issue.

"It clearly is critical that FDA has the time it needs to do a thorough and complete review of new drugs before consumers are exposed to them," said Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., who chairs the House Government Reform and Oversight Committee. If the user-fee law "is causing undue pressure, we need to fix that."

 U.S. Painkiller Crisis  
  Profile2 News135GalleryLinks  
  $894 million deal ends pain of Pfizer's lawsuits (2008-10-17)
  Court limits Merck monitoring in Vioxx case (2008-06-05)
  NJ, Texas courts scrap awards from Vioxx cases (2008-05-29)
  Merck agrees to $58M settlement over Vioxx ad claims (2008-05-20)
  Pfizer reaches deal with some Celebrex users: report (2008-05-02)
  Merck extends deadline for Vioxx settlement (2008-05-01)
  FDA deadlines may impact drug safety (2008-03-26)
  Merck says 44K sign for Vioxx settlement (2008-03-03)
  Merck to pay $4.85B Vioxx settlement (2007-11-09)
  Judge expects Vioxx stroke cases (2007-07-29)
  Ruling puts Texas Vioxx lawsuits on hold (2007-04-21)
  NJ jury orders Merck to pay $47.5 mln in Vioxx case (2007-03-12)
  Vioxx award cut to $7.75M (2006-12-21)
  FDA wants sterner pain reliever warnings (2006-12-19)
  Merck wins latest federal Vioxx trial (2006-12-13)
  Judge denies class status in Vioxx cases (2006-11-22)
  Merck, Schering-Plough shares climb (2006-10-20)
  Merck profit off; shares up on drug sales (2006-10-20)
  Vioxx suits surge to beat deadline (2006-09-30)
  Report: FDA needs to fix post-market drug safety (2006-09-22)
  Merck moves forward with Vioxx successor (2006-08-23)
  FDA, MIT to collaborate on drug safety (2006-08-18)
  Merck suffers 2 setbacks in Vioxx cases (2006-08-17)
  Merck not liable for man's health woes (2006-08-02)
  Painkillers may raise heart attack risk slightly (2006-08-02)
Related Events
  • American Markets

  • Stories Coverages

    NewsGuide EventCityPeopleShowCompany 
     ENTSportsBIZEDULifeMilitaryPoliticsSocietyHealth 


    [2009 NFL]: Colts win a close one, Saints roll to stay unbeaten (22:49 11/22)


    [111th Congress]: Analysis: Fed under fire as public anger mounts (22:49 11/22)


    [2008 U.S. Financial Rescue]: Analysis: Fed under fire as public anger mounts (22:49 11/22)

    [Sept 11 Terror Attack]: Lawyer: 9/11 defendants want platform for views (22:49 11/22)

    [CIA Prison Scandal]: Lawyer: 9/11 defendants want platform for views (22:49 11/22)


    [2009 US Health Reform]: Senate Democrats at odds over health care bill (22:49 11/22)

    [2005 Hurricane Katrina]: 59 and counting: Health care bill nears test vote (12:37 11/21)


    [2009 Swine Flu]: Experts say radical measures won't stop swine flu (08:24 11/19)


    [2008 EU Recession]: Europe's recovery will be 'gradual': OECD (08:24 11/19)

    [China-U.S.]: Obama meets Wen as China visit winds down (22:06 11/17)



    Muzi.com

    Muzi.com : About | Sitemap | Ads | Contact
    All Rights Reserved 1994-2006 - All rights reserved.