Health & Medicine - Posted by Mark Michaud-Rochester on Monday, January 11, 2010 18:00 - 3 Comments
FDA drug warnings under the microscope

Safety issues frequently emerge after a drug has been introduced to the market. The FDA can act in a number of ways. It can choose to remove the drug from the market or it can issue an advisory to physicians, the strongest of which is a “black box” warning which appears on the drug label.
U. ROCHESTER—An FDA safety warning for commonly prescribed antipsychotic medications resulted in a decline in usage among the elderly with dementia, a new study shows.
The findings—published today in the Archives of Internal Medicine—raise the question as to whether the FDA’s system of communicating these warnings is sufficiently targeted and effective
“Because this medication class has limited evidence of benefit among the elderly with dementia and significantly increases their risk of death, the ‘right’ magnitude of decline in usage is not clear,” says University of Rochester Medical Center neurologist Ray Dorsey, the study’s lead author. “More generally, the study raises larger issues about appropriate prescribing, particularly among the elderly, and the need to improve risk communication to patients and providers.”
Safety issues frequently emerge after a drug has been introduced to the market. These concerns arise either through ongoing clinical research or adverse events reported by post-market surveillance of the drug. The FDA can act upon this information in a number of ways. It can choose to remove the drug from the market or it can issue an advisory to physicians, the strongest of which is a “black box” warning which appears on the drug label.
The authors examined the impact of these warnings on a class of drugs called atypical antipsychotics. In April 2005, the FDA issued an advisory warning that elderly patients with dementia treated with these drugs were at increased risk of death.
While atypical antipsychotic drugs have only been approved by the FDA to treat conditions such as schizophrenia and bipolar affective disorder, drugs are often used to treat conditions for which they have not been licensed. This practice is referred to as “off-label,” meaning the condition is not listed on the drug’s label as an approved use.
In this case, the FDA warning applied to the off-label use of these drugs to treat behavioral disorders in elderly patients with dementia. The FDA issued the advisory after data from clinical studies of these drugs in this population showed a 60-70 percent higher death rate than those receiving a placebo.
Using a national database of office-based prescribing developed and maintained by IMS Health, Inc., the authors evaluated usage of atypical antipsychotics both before and after the issuance of the FDA warning.
Prior to the advisory, use of these drugs among patients with dementia grew at an average annual rate of 16 percent. In the year following the advisory, their use among this population fell by 19 percent. Use of antipsychotics continued to decline in subsequent years, and by 2008 (three years after the FDA warning), their use among the elderly with dementia was about 50 percent less than before the warning.
“Given the risks of atypical antipsychotics among the elderly, these reductions in use represent an important first step,” says University of Chicago Medical Center internist Caleb Alexander, co-author of the study. “All too often, these drugs have been used in settings with unclear benefits and unacceptable risks, and despite the decreases we document many elderly with dementia continue to receive these therapies.”
Warnings that involve off-label use of medications create a complex set of problems for regulators and physicians. In an accompanying editorial, it is noted that the elderly are historically under-represented in clinical trials, which places physicians in the uncomfortable position of generalizing evidence obtained from one population to another population where the risk to benefit trade-off may be different.
When the risks are deemed to be significant, the FDA is then placed in a position of having to develop the right message and ensure that it reaches the target audience, which in this instance was for a usage that had not been approved by the agency.
The authors contend that the approach currently employed by the FDA needs to be supplemented with efforts such as communications that target the most frequent prescribers of the medication, as opposed to a blanket communication to all physicians, and a coordinated effort between the FDA and the drug’s manufacturers to inform patients and/or their families of safety risks.
Additionally, advisories may also need to contain more specific information for providers, such as potential alternative treatments. Without such direction, particularly in instances where the medication is being used off-label and there is no clear alternative, physicians could potentially end up choosing a drug that is worse.
In the case of antipsychotic medications, a potential alternative is conventional antipsychotic therapy, a treatment option that could expose patients to even greater safety risks.
“This study points to the clear need to improve the manner by which we communicate drug advisories to the public,” says Dorsey. “Physicians and patients need direct and clear communication about drug risks if the goal is to restrict or modify usage and improve public health.”
The study was supported with funding from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the National Institutes of Health.
University of Rochester health news: www.urmc.rochester.edu/news/
3 Comments
emc2
Let’s cut to the chase here. Antipsychotic medications are harmful, very harmful. If you read the Black Box warning you will see the effects these can create on people of all ages. As far as the elderly go, why would you give them any psychoactive medication that can cause such terrifying adverse effects. Perhaps try talking to them, taking a walk in a pleasant environment or ensuring they have the best possible nutrition. It seems to me that psychiatry is the quick and easy substitute for caring.
To find out more about the truth of psychiatry read the investigations conducted by Citizens Commission on Human Rights.
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The names of the drugs are in the Reuters news story. It seems like no one was willing to come out and say that this looks like a coup for people concerned about overprescription of these drugs.