Friday, June 15, 2007

International Herald Tribune Editorial - Studying Avandia

International Herald Tribune Editorial - Studying Avandia
Copyright by The International Herald Tribune
Published: June 14, 2007


Eight years and 7 million patients later, we still don't know whether the diabetes drug, Avandia, is safe or effective. This is largely because the manufacturer, GlaxoSmithKline, failed to vigorously pursue questions about cardiac safety and the Food and Drug Administration acquiesced in its feeble efforts. Both either ignored or tried to silence scientists who raised the alarm.

Avandia was approved for use in 1999 based on studies showing that it lowered blood glucose levels in patients suffering from Type 2 diabetes. At the time, the FDA's medical reviewer called for a postmarketing study to address cardiovascular risks. The company's response was a study that looked primarily at long-term control of blood sugar - a potential plus in marketing the drug - and only glancingly at cardiac risks. Only because European regulators insisted on a more comprehensive study did the company start one.

So what's going on here? One disturbing possibility is that Glaxo has designed tests that have the effect of meeting the company's marketing objectives while minimizing risks.

There are two suspected problems with Avandia. One is heart failure, where the heart gradually loses its ability to pump sufficient blood. That side effect has long been recognized. But an FDA drug safety officer told The New York Times that she was rebuked and removed from assessing the drug last year after urging a black box warning, the agency's strongest. The agency has now requested such a warning.

The other, more troublesome, issue is the risk of sudden heart attacks. Here, too, there were early signals of a potential problem, raised both by the FDA's own reviewer and an outside authority, Dr. John Buse, who is about to become president of the American Diabetes Association. In 1999, when he was still a junior academic, Buse warned about possible cardiac danger only, he says, to have a high company official call his supervisor, castigate him as a liar and make veiled threats of a huge lawsuit. Now, after further signals of possible danger and a melange of conflicting studies, the FDA plans to present the issue to a panel of experts.

At this point, no one is sure whether the heart attack risks from Avandia are significant. The clearest lesson is that the FDA needs the power to demand adequate studies and the resources to analyze the results. That would not guarantee that the regulators would act as vigorously as needed, but it would increase the odds.

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