 |
|
|
Drugs approved by the Food and Drug Administration just
before their deadlines were much more likely to have later safety problems than
medications approved at other times, a study by Harvard scientists revealed.
Daniel Carpenter, Ph.D., of the Harvard University Department
of Government and colleagues reported in the March 27 issue of the New England
Journal of Medicine that, from 1993 to 2004, drugs approved in the final two
months of the review period allowed under the Prescription Drug User Free Act
were far more likely to be withdrawn for safety reasons than drugs approved at
other times.
The study identified the date of approval for all new drugs
approved since 1993 relative to their PDUFA review deadlines. Of these, 100
were approved within the two months before the deadline, and 218 were approved
at other times. Seven of the 100 drugs approved just before the deadline were
subsequently withdrawn, versus four of 216 approvals at all other times. Moreover,
ten of the late approvals were later slapped with a black-box warning, compared
with four of the other approvals. And 18 of the late-approved drugs later had a
dosage form discontinued, versus 8.8% of the other approvals.
“Deadlines may offer a blunt tool with which to accelerate
review. But in keeping with reports from FDA scientists, our findings suggest
that deadlines may also cause drugs approved under these constraints to have a
higher likelihood of unanticipated safety problems once they are in widespread
use,” Dr. Carpenter said in his study.
He also offered some examples of drugs approved close to
deadline whose problems drew regulators’ attention after they were on the
market. These drugs include Baycol, a cholesterol drug that Bayer voluntarily
withdrew after 31 deaths, Vioxx, a pain reliever ordered off the shelves after
a clinical trial showed triple the rate of heart deaths, and Rezulin, a
diabetes drug that was withdrawn from the UK market for toxic effects on the
liver.
Dr. Carpenter suggested that the problem might not lie with
the deadlines themselves, but rather with the FDA’s resources for conducting
speedy reviews.
On the other hand, Dr. Janet Woodcock, director of the FDA Center
for Drug Evaluation and Research denied Dr. Carpenter’s findings saying: “FDA
won’t approve a drug if we are not ready. The timeframes established by PDUFA
are guidelines, and we have the flexibility to miss a PDUFA date if we’re not
certain about the safety of a drug and want more time to review it. And we have
the option of denying approval altogether if there is any question about safety,”
the Boston Globe reports.
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the National Science
Foundation, and Harvard
University funded the Dr.
Carpenter’s study.
© 2007 - 2008 - eFluxMedia