Updated November 2016
In looking for source material on the state of healthcare in the United States and Canada, I stumbled on this interesting paper written by Donald Light, Joel Lexchin and Jonathan Darrow entitled "Institutional Corruption of Pharmaceuticals and the Myth of Safe and Effective Drugs".
In looking for source material on the state of healthcare in the United States and Canada, I stumbled on this interesting paper written by Donald Light, Joel Lexchin and Jonathan Darrow entitled "Institutional Corruption of Pharmaceuticals and the Myth of Safe and Effective Drugs".
Let's begin by looking at some background information about the drug
approval process in the United States. The Center for Drug Evaluation and
Research (or CDER) was created in 1987 as the division within the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) that is ultimately responsible for
determining which prescription, generic and over-the-counter drugs should be
approved for public use. While this seems like a great filter, the
funding for CDER does not come from taxpayers, it comes from user fees paid by
the same biopharma companies that are seeking approval for their products.
These fees fall under the Prescription Drug User Fee Act (PDUFA) which
was passed in 1992. These user fees allowed the FDA to hire 600 more drug
reviewers; in return, companies received a guarantee that the FDA would review
priority applications within 6 months and standard applications within 12
months, down from roughly 30 months before the PDUFA was implemented. At the very least, this has the appearance of a conflict of
interest and, as you will see, leads to additional dangerous complications.
The paperwork for new drug approvals in the United States can often
exceed 100,000 pages in length, another factor that greatly complicates the
approval process.
Now, let's look at some
statistics. A review of the 39 most scientifically sound studies on
prescription drugs that were performed between 1964 and 1995 found that 4.7
percent of all hospital admissions were due to serious reactions from
prescription drugs that had been appropriately prescribed by physicians and
used by patients. In addition, 2.1 percent of patients in hospitals
experienced an adverse drug reaction, resulting in a combined total of 6.8
percent of hospital patients that experienced an adverse drug reaction.
If we multiply this by the 40 million annual admissions to hospitals in
the United States, data indicates that at least 2.7 million Americans
experience a serious adverse drug reaction annually. This does not
include those who have an adverse reaction at home or in a long-term care
facility. Of all hospitalized patients, 0.32 percent or 128,000 died of
complications from prescription drugs annually, matching strokes as the fourth
leading cause of death. If we look at data outside of hospitals, the
number of adverse side effects is even worse. It is estimated that there
are 30 adverse reactions occur outside of hospitals for every one that leads to
hospitalization, meaning that about 81 million adverse side effects are
experienced every year due to prescription medications. Many of these go
unreported.
Let's look at the paper
by Light et al. The authors open with these observations:
"Institutional
corruption is a normative concept of growing importance that embodies the
systemic dependencies and informal practices that distort an institution’s
societal mission. An extensive range of studies and lawsuits already documents
strategies by which pharmaceutical companies hide, ignore, or mis- represent
evidence about new drugs; distort the medi- cal literature; and misrepresent
products to prescribing physicians. We focus on the consequences for patients:
millions of adverse reactions. After defining institutional corruption, we
focus on evidence that it lies behind the epidemic of harms and the paucity of
benefits.
It is our thesis that
institutional corruption has occurred at three levels. First, through
large-scale lobbying and political contributions, the pharmaceutical industry
has influenced Congress to pass legislation that has compromised the mission
of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Second, largely as a result of
industry pressure, Congress has underfunded FDA enforcement capacities since
1906, and turning to industry-paid “user fees” since 1992 has biased funding
to limit the FDA’s ability to protect the public from serious adverse reactions
to drugs that have few offsetting advantages. Finally, industry has commercialized the role of physicians and undermined their position as independent,
trusted advisers to patients." (my bold)
The authors observe that
the major patent-based research pharmaceutical companies
"commit" themselves to improving health at the same time as they
prioritize the importance of providing their investors with a high rate of return on their stock investments. That said, this
research by Light et al shows that it is quite clear that many of these same companies are
developing drugs that are little improved over their existing product lines and
that these "new products" have significantly increased probablilities
of adverse reactions. Through their trade association, the
Pharmaceutical Research Manufacturers of America, aka PhRMA, Big Pharma constantly remind sthe public and politicians of the high cost of research and
development of new drugs, leading Congress to authorize programs that
contribute billions of dollars of taxpayers money to support research and
development and exempt Big Pharma from market competition through the expanding
use of patent protections. In fact, data from the National Science
Foundation indicates that these "innovative" pharmaceutical
companies only devote 1.3 percent of revenues after taxpayer subsidies to
discovering new drugs, devoting twice as much to promotion as they do to
research and development.
Big Pharma measures its
innovation in terms of new molecular entities (NMEs) but the authors' research
shows that many of these NMEs provide little in terms of clinical advantages
to patients and may be inferior to previously approved drugs, however they still get
approval by the FDA. Going back to the years between 1970 and the
mid-1990s, research has shown that only 11 to 15.6 percent of NMEs
provided important gains to patients. In fact, as shown on this table,
the therapeutic value of most 946 drugs marketed in France between 2002 and
2011, only 0.2 percent or 2 drugs provided a major breakthrough in a new area
of treatment, 1.4 percent provided a significant clinical advance,
and 15.6 percent resulted in more risk of harm than benefit:
By way of comparison, in
the years between 1981 and 2001, the independent French drug bulletin La revue
Prescrire found that 12 percent of new drugs offered therapeutic advantages
over their precursors, a level that fell to 8 percent between 2002
and 2011.
By marketing drugs that
are similar molecularly to their pre-existing counterparts, drug companies take
on far less risk, marketing these drugs based on their newness rather than
their efficacy. Big Pharma certainly never mentions the fact that
15.6 percent of their products lead to more harm than good. In fact, a study by J. Lexchin reveals that one in five
(19.4 percent) NMEs that received approval by the FDA ends up causing serious
enough harm to patients that they are either withdrawn from the marketplace or
are given out to patients with a severe warning. Of the drugs that are
reviewed in less time, one in three caused serious harm.
What are the root causes of this issue?
There are three main features of the modern drug-testing system that work
in the favour of industry profits and against the development of safe drugs
that improve human health:
1.) The testing criteria used by
the FDA contribute to the massive number of new drugs that are approved that
have no increased benefits to users. First, these drugs are tested
against placebos rather than established effective drugs. Second, the use
of non-inferiority trials show only that a drug is not worse than another
drug used to treat a similar symptom by more than a specific margin.
2.) Drug companies are
allowed to test their own products. This allows them to design trials
that minimize the detection of harmful side effects and maximize the benefits.
As well, drug companies are allowed to exclude patients that are most
likely to have adverse reactions to their drugs; this allows them to
"hand-pick" those that are most likely to benefit, making the drugs
look safer and more effective than they really are.
3.) Drug companies
treat trials as marketing vehicles. Trials are designed to product
results that support the marketing of a new drug. This is followed
by the hiring of statisticians and writers who produced articles for various medical
journals that are favourable to the new drug. Statistics show that drug
trials that are funded by drug companies are at least 2.5 times more likely to
favour the sponsor's drug in articles than those drugs that go through clinical
trials that are non-commercially funded.
As I noted in the
introduction, the pharmaceutical industry pays a "user fee" under
the Prescription Drug User Fee Act which was passed into law in 1992.
As I noted, this fee guarantees that drug companies will get
expedited approval of the drugs that they have submitted for FDA approval.
Unfortunately, these shortened times have been good for one thing;
drug companies and their profits. An in-depth analysis found that
each 10 month reduction in approval time resulted in an 18.1 percent increase
in serious adverse reactions, a 10.9 precent increase in hospitalizations and a
7.2 percent increase in deaths related to drug usage.
How can these issues be
fixed? The authors have five recommendations:
1.) Prevent
pharmaceutical companies from testing their own drugs. New drugs should
be tested by independent institutions.
2,) New leadership is
required at the FDA to build a culture focused on safety for consumers.
3.) User fees paid by Big
Pharma under the current scheme must end.
4.) New drugs should
require patient-relevant evidence of superiority and the number of drugs in
the same class should be limited.
5.) A new National Drug
Safety Board should be established to independently investigate and report on
drug safety issues.
As shown on this table and graph, with the massive amount of money
that Big Pharma spends on Congress annually...
...it is highly unlikely
that we will see any improvement in drug efficacy and safety any time
soon.
John LeCarre's The Constant Gardener in real life. You are right. Nothing will get fixed with the amount of money going into the system to make sure it does not.
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