Comparison of Schizophrenia Drugs Often Favors Firm Funding Study
continued
Sara Corya, medical director for neuroscience at Eli Lilly, a company
Davis singled out for praise for the quality of its studies, said that
conflicting results do not cancel each other out, and that they help
clinicians understand the
strengths of different drugs. Corya and Davis
noted that Lilly has strict rules to prevent author-shopping.
"The reality is that even in head-to-head comparisons, study results will
differ for a variety of reasons, some transparent, some opaque," added
Mariann Caprino, a spokeswoman for Pfizer, whose antipsychotic drug
Geodon
did not perform as well as
Zyprexa in two trials funded by Eli Lilly.
Pfizer's own studies found that
Geodon was superior to Zyprexa in one trial and inferior in another.
"What this all means," Caprino said, "is there is no substitute for the
judgment and experience of the clinician in selecting among a fortunately
broad palette of medicines."
But several experts say industry-sponsored trials are failing to answer
the questions doctors really need answered: Which drug works best for which
patient? Are differences in drugs worth the differences in cost? How many
patients are likely to recover entirely, rather than just show progress in
the right direction? Head-to-head trials of similar medications may show
statistical differences in how they perform, but those differences may not
mean very much for doctors and patients, said Robert Rosenheck, a Yale
psychiatrist.
What a clinician wants to know is whether the patient she is treating
will get better on a drug, said Thomas R. Insel, director of the National
Institute of Mental Health. "If they are not going to get well, what is the
better approach? The public is less interested in statistical significance
and more interested in clinical significance."
The difference between the two was highlighted by the recent study of
antipsychotic drugs funded by the National Institute of Mental Health.
Rather than focus on how some symptom or side effect waxes and wanes, the
government trial focused on the big picture: How do typical schizophrenia
patients fare on the drugs over the long term?
The results were sobering: Regardless of the drug, three-quarters of all
patients stopped taking it, either because it did not make them better or
had intolerable side effects. The discontinuation rates remained high when
they were switched to a new drug, but patients stayed on clozapine about 11
months, compared with only three months for
Seroquel,
Risperdal or Zyprexa, which are far more heavily marketed --
and dominate sales.
"Clozapine is better by far than the other antipsychotics," said Carol
Tamminga, a psychiatry professor at the University of Texas Southwestern
Medical Center at Dallas, who wrote an editorial in the American Journal of
Psychiatry about the trial. "The question is: Why do doctors not use it?"
The drug requires more careful monitoring to prevent potentially fatal
bone-marrow toxicity, she said, but a national monitoring program ensures it
is used properly. Tamminga agreed that marketing may play a role in why the
drug is not used more often.
"Clozapine is less marketed," she said. "It is off patent. Even when it
was on patent, it has never been as actively marketed as the other drugs."
The government study also provided the big picture missing from
company-sponsored trials, said Jeffrey Lieberman, a Columbia University
psychiatrist who led the first phase of the study: "The drugs work, but only
so well. They are not meeting expectations."
By focusing on the horse race -- which drug is marginally better --
industry studies obscure the reality that better drugs are needed overall,
agreed Rennie, who is a professor of medicine at the University of
California at San Francisco.
"Finding the 100th similar antipsychotic drug is not where the research
should be," he said. "It should be to develop new drugs, not 'me, too'
drugs."
Rennie said that government agencies such as the Centers for Medicaid and
Medicare Services and the Department of Veterans Affairs that disburse
billions of dollars for treatment should rely on publicly funded studies.
"There are lots of questions that drug companies are not going to be
primarily interested in," agreed Robert Temple, a senior official at the
Food and Drug Administration. He has long been a personal advocate of what
he calls a "national problems laboratory."
But Uwe Reinhardt, a political economist at Princeton, said drug companies,
device manufacturers and even physicians are reluctant to delve into
questions of cost-effectiveness because such inquiries may find that the
latest, most expensive treatment is not worth the cost.
"I have come to believe a lot of inefficiency is quite deliberate and
supported by Congress," he said. "One person's inefficiency is another
person's income."
Source: Washington Post
Last updated: 3/06
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