September 2008
Drug company lied about med risks, JAMA study says
A comparison of
internal company documents, data submitted by the company to the FDA, and
published clinical trial results indicates that the risk-benefit profile of
the drug rofecoxib in clinical trials involving patients with
cognitive impairment may have been misrepresented by study sponsor Merck,
according to an article in the April 16 issue of JAMA.
"Sponsors have a
marketing interest to represent their products in the best light. This
approach conflicts with scientific standards that require the symmetric and
comparable reporting of safety and efficacy data. Selective reporting of the
results of clinical trials can misrepresent the risk-benefit profile of
drugs," the authors wrote.
Bruce M. Psaty, MD,
PhD, and Richard A. Kronmal, PhD, of the University of Washington, Seattle,
conducted a review of documents to summarize how the study sponsor
represented findings regarding the risk of death associated with rofecoxib
in clinical trials of patients with Alzheimer disease or cognitive
impairment.
The documents became
available during litigation related to rofecoxib involving Merck, including
internal company analyses and information provided by the sponsor to the
Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The authors also evaluated information
in two published articles that reported results of these trials.
In one article
(reporting results of protocol 091) published in 2004, 11 "non-drug related
deaths" were reported (9 deaths among 346 rofecoxib patients and 2 deaths
among 346 placebo patients). In another article (reporting results of
protocol 078) published in 2005, 39 deaths were reported among patients
taking study treatment or within 14 days of the last dose (24 among 725
rofecoxib patients and 15 among 732 placebo patients) and an additional 22
deaths in the off-drug period (17 in rofecoxib patients and 5 in placebo
patients).
"However, these
articles did not include analyses or statistical tests of the mortality
data, and the two articles concluded that regarding safety, rofecoxib is
'well tolerated,'" the authors pointed out.
In contrast, in April
2001, the company's internal intention-to-treat analyses (data analysis
technique based on evaluation of patients in the study group to which they
were randomly assigned) of pooled data from these two trials identified a
significant three-fold increase in total mortality, with overall mortality
of 34 deaths among 1,069 rofecoxib patients and 12 deaths among 1,078
placebo patients.
"These mortality
analyses were neither provided to the FDA nor made public in a timely
fashion," the authors noted. The data submitted by the sponsor to the FDA in
a Safety Update Report in July 2001 used on-treatment analysis (a data
analysis technique based only on evaluation of patients who were actually
taking the drug or placebo they were assigned to take) methods and reported
29 deaths (2.7 percent) among 1,067 rofecoxib patients and 17 deaths (1.6
percent) among 1,075 placebo patients. "This on-treatment approach to
reporting minimized the appearance of any mortality risk," they added.
Deaths that had occurred more than 14 days after discontinuation of the
trial drug apparently were not included.
In Dec. 2001, when the
FDA raised safety questions about the submitted safety data, the sponsor did
not bring these issues to an institutional review board for review and
revealed that there was no data and safety monitoring board (DSMB) for the
protocol 078 study.
During additional
follow-up time for the 078 study, there were eight excess deaths among those
randomly assigned to receive rofecoxib, which was also associated with an
increased risk of progression to Alzheimer disease, "a finding that was
apparent early in the trial. The mortality findings and the Alzheimer
disease findings would, in our judgment, have prompted a DSMB, if it had
existed, to stop the trial early," the researchers wrote.
"Sponsors have a direct
financial interest in their products and a fiduciary duty to shareholders to
provide a return on their investment. These interests disqualify sponsors
from other important duties, including those normally accorded to DSMBs and
institutional review boards (IRBs)." the report stated.
"The commercialization
of clinical trials has neither improved the quality of the science nor
enhanced the protection of human research participants. The findings from
this case study suggest that additional protections for human research
participants, including new approaches for the conduct, oversight, and
reporting of industry-sponsored trials, are necessary." the authors
concluded.
SOURCE:
JAMA,
April 16, 2008.