
September 26, 2012
full story and comments:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2012/sep/21/drugs-industry-scandal-ben-goldacre
The drugs don't work: a modern medical scandal
The doctors
prescribing the drugs don't know they don't do what they're meant to. Nor do
their patients. The manufacturers know full well, but they're not telling.
Drugs are tested by their manufacturers, in poorly designed trials, on
hopelessly small numbers of weird, unrepresentative patients, and analysed
using techniques that exaggerate the benefits. Photograph: Photograph: Getty
Images. Digital manipulation: Phil Partridge for GNL Imaging
Reboxetine is a drug I have prescribed. Other
drugs had done nothing
for my patient, so we wanted to try something new. I'd read the trial data
before I wrote the prescription, and found only well-designed, fair tests,
with overwhelmingly positive results. Reboxetine was better than a placebo,
and as good as any other antidepressant in head-to-head comparisons. It's
approved for use by the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency
(the MHRA),
which governs all drugs in the UK. Millions of doses are prescribed every
year, around the world. Reboxetine was clearly a safe and effective
treatment. The patient and I discussed the evidence briefly, and agreed it
was the right treatment to try next. I signed a prescription.
But we
had both been misled. In October 2010, a group of researchers was finally
able to bring together all the data that had ever been collected on
reboxetine, both from trials that were published and from those that had
never appeared in academic papers. When all this trial data was put
together, it produced a shocking picture. Seven trials had been conducted
comparing reboxetine against a placebo. Only one, conducted in 254 patients,
had a neat, positive result, and that one was published in an academic
journal, for doctors
and researchers to read. But six more trials were conducted, in almost 10
times as many patients. All of them showed that reboxetine was no better
than a dummy sugar pill. None of these trials was published. I had no idea
they existed.
It got worse. The trials comparing reboxetine against
other drugs showed exactly the same picture: three small studies, 507
patients in total, showed that reboxetine was just as good as any other
drug. They were all published. But 1,657 patients' worth of data was left
unpublished, and this unpublished data showed that patients on reboxetine
did worse than those on other drugs. If all this wasn't bad enough, there
was also the side-effects data. The drug looked fine in the trials that
appeared in the academic literature; but when we saw the unpublished
studies, it turned out that patients were more likely to have side-effects,
more likely to drop out of taking the drug and more likely to withdraw from
the trial because of side-effects, if they were taking reboxetine rather
than one of its competitors.
I did everything a doctor is supposed to
do. I read all the papers, I critically appraised them, I understood them, I
discussed them with the patient and we made a decision together, based on
the evidence. In the published data, reboxetine was a safe and effective
drug. In reality, it was no better than a sugar pill and, worse, it does
more harm than good. As a doctor, I did something that, on the balance of
all the evidence, harmed my patient, simply because unflattering data was
left unpublished.
Nobody broke any law in that situation, reboxetine
is still on the market and the system that allowed all this to happen is
still in play, for all drugs, in all countries in the world. Negative data
goes missing, for all treatments, in all areas of science. The regulators
and professional bodies we would reasonably expect to stamp out such
practices have failed us. These problems have been protected from public
scrutiny because they're too complex to capture in a soundbite. This is why
they've gone unfixed by politicians, at least to some extent; but it's also
why it takes detail to explain. The people you should have been able to
trust to fix these problems have failed you, and because you have to
understand a problem properly in order to fix it, there are some things you
need to know.
Drugs are tested by the people who manufacture them, in
poorly designed trials, on hopelessly small numbers of weird,
unrepresentative patients, and analysed using techniques that are flawed by
design, in such a way that they exaggerate the benefits of treatments.
Unsurprisingly, these trials tend to produce results that favour the
manufacturer. When trials throw up results that companies don't like, they
are perfectly entitled to hide them from doctors and patients, so we only
ever see a distorted picture of any drug's true effects. Regulators see most
of the trial data, but only from early on in a drug's life, and even then
they don't give this data to doctors or patients, or even to other parts of
government. This distorted evidence is then communicated and applied in a
distorted fashion.
In their 40 years of practice after leaving
medical school, doctors hear about what works ad hoc, from sales reps,
colleagues and journals. But those colleagues can be in the pay of drug
companies -- often undisclosed -- and the journals are, too. And so are the
patient groups. And finally, academic papers, which everyone thinks of as
objective, are often covertly planned and written by people who work
directly for the companies, without disclosure. Sometimes whole academic
journals are owned outright by one drug company. Aside from all this, for
several of the most important and enduring problems in medicine, we have no
idea what the best treatment is, because it's not in anyone's financial
interest to conduct any trials at all.
Now, on to the details.
In
2010, researchers from Harvard and Toronto found all the trials looking at
five major classes of drug -- antidepressants, ulcer drugs and so on -- then
measured two key features: were they positive, and were they funded by
industry? They found more than 500 trials in total: 85% of the
industry-funded studies were positive, but only 50% of the government-funded
trials were. In 2007, researchers looked at every published trial that set
out to explore the benefits of a statin. These cholesterol-lowering drugs
reduce your risk of having a heart attack and are prescribed in very large
quantities. This study found 192 trials in total, either comparing one
statin against another, or comparing a statin against a different kind of
treatment. They found that industry-funded trials were 20 times more likely
to give results favouring the test drug.
These are frightening
results, but they come from individual studies. So let's consider systematic
reviews into this area. In 2003, two were published. They took all the
studies ever published that looked at whether industry funding is associated
with pro-industry results, and both found that industry-funded trials were,
overall, about four times more likely to report positive results. A further
review in 2007 looked at the new studies in the intervening four years: it
found 20 more pieces of work, and all but two showed that industry-sponsored
trials were more likely to report flattering results.
It turns out
that this pattern persists even when you move away from published academic
papers and look instead at trial reports from academic conferences. James
Fries and Eswar Krishnan, at the Stanford University School of Medicine in
California, studied all the research abstracts presented at the 2001
American College of Rheumatology meetings which reported any kind of trial
and acknowledged industry sponsorship, in order to find out what proportion
had results that favoured the sponsor's drug.
In general, the results
section of an academic paper is extensive: the raw numbers are given for
each outcome, and for each possible causal factor, but not just as raw
figures. The "ranges" are given, subgroups are explored, statistical tests
conducted, and each detail is described in table form, and in shorter
narrative form in the text. This lengthy process is usually spread over
several pages. In
Fries and
Krishnan (2004), this level of detail was unnecessary. The results
section is a single, simple and -- I like to imagine -- fairly
passive-aggressive sentence:
"The results from every randomised
controlled trial (45 out of 45) favoured the drug of the sponsor."
How does this happen? How do industry-sponsored trials almost always manage
to get a positive result? Sometimes trials are flawed by design. You can
compare your new drug with something you know to be rubbish � an existing
drug at an inadequate dose, perhaps, or a placebo sugar pill that does
almost nothing. You can choose your patients very carefully, so they are
more likely to get better on your treatment. You can peek at the results
halfway through, and stop your trial early if they look good. But after all
these methodological quirks comes one very simple insult to the integrity of
the data. Sometimes, drug companies conduct lots of trials, and when they
see that the results are unflattering, they simply fail to publish them.
Because researchers are free to bury any result they please, patients
are exposed to harm on a staggering scale throughout the whole of medicine.
Doctors can have no idea about the true effects of the treatments they give.
Does this drug really work best, or have I simply been deprived of half the
data? No one can tell. Is this expensive drug worth the money, or has the
data simply been massaged? No one can tell. Will this drug kill patients? Is
there any evidence that it's dangerous? No one can tell. This is a bizarre
situation to arise in medicine, a discipline in which everything is supposed
to be based on evidence.
And this data is withheld from everyone in
medicine, from top to bottom. Nice, for example, is the
National Institute for Health and Clinical
Excellence, created by the British government to conduct careful,
unbiased summaries of all the evidence on new treatments. It is unable
either to identify or to access data on a drug's effectiveness that's been
withheld by researchers or companies: Nice has no more legal right to that
data than you or I do, even though it is making decisions about
effectiveness, and cost-effectiveness, on behalf of the NHS, for millions of
people.
In any sensible world, when researchers are conducting trials
on a new tablet for a drug company, for example, we'd expect universal
contracts, making it clear that all researchers are obliged to publish their
results, and that industry sponsors -- which have a huge interest in
positive results -- must have no control over the data. But, despite
everything we know about industry-funded research being systematically
biased, this does not happen. In fact, the opposite is true: it is entirely
normal for researchers and academics conducting industry-funded trials to
sign contracts subjecting them to gagging clauses that forbid them to
publish, discuss or analyse data from their trials without the permission of
the funder.
This is such a secretive and shameful situation that even
trying to document it in public can be a fraught business. In 2006, a paper
was published in the
Journal of the American Medical Association (Jama), one of the biggest
medical journals in the world, describing how common it was for researchers
doing industry-funded trials to have these kinds of constraints placed on
their right to publish the results. The study was conducted by the
Nordic Cochrane Centre and it looked
at all the trials given approval to go ahead in Copenhagen and
Frederiksberg. (If you're wondering why these two cities were chosen, it was
simply a matter of practicality: the researchers applied elsewhere without
success, and were specifically refused access to data in the UK.) These
trials were overwhelmingly sponsored by the pharmaceutical industry (98%)
and the rules governing the management of the results tell a story that
walks the now familiar line between frightening and absurd.
For 16 of
the 44 trials, the sponsoring company got to see the data as it accumulated,
and in a further 16 it had the right to stop the trial at any time, for any
reason. This means that a company can see if a trial is going against it,
and can interfere as it progresses, distorting the results. Even if the
study was allowed to finish, the data could still be suppressed: there were
constraints on publication rights in 40 of the 44 trials, and in half of
them the contracts specifically stated that the sponsor either owned the
data outright (what about the patients, you might say?), or needed to
approve the final publication, or both. None of these restrictions was
mentioned in any of the published papers.
When the paper describing this
situation was published in Jama, Lif, the Danish pharmaceutical industry
association, responded by announcing, in the Journal of the Danish Medical
Association, that it was "both shaken and enraged about the criticism, that
could not be recognised". It demanded an investigation of the scientists,
though it failed to say by whom or of what. Lif then wrote to the Danish
Committee on Scientific Dishonesty, accusing the Cochrane researchers of
scientific misconduct. We can't see the letter, but the researchers say the
allegations were extremely serious -- they were accused of deliberately
distorting the data -- but vague, and without documents or evidence to back
them up.
Nonetheless, the investigation went on for a year.
Peter Gotzsche,
director of the Cochrane Centre, told the British Medical Journal that only
Lif's third letter, 10 months into this process, made specific allegations
that could be investigated by the committee. Two months after that, the
charges were dismissed. The Cochrane researchers had done nothing wrong. But
before they were cleared, Lif copied the letters alleging scientific
dishonesty to the hospital where four of them worked, and to the management
organisation running that hospital, and sent similar letters to the Danish
medical association, the ministry of health, the ministry of science and so
on. Gotzsche and his colleagues felt "intimidated and harassed" by Lif's
behaviour. Lif continued to insist that the researchers were guilty of
misconduct even after the investigation was completed.
Paroxetine is
a commonly used antidepressant, from the class of drugs known as selective
serotonin reuptake inhibitors or SSRIs. It's also a good example of how
companies have exploited our long-standing permissiveness about missing
trials, and found loopholes in our inadequate regulations on trial
disclosure.
To understand why, we first need to go through a quirk of
the licensing process. Drugs do not simply come on to the market for use in
all medical conditions: for any specific use of any drug, in any specific
disease, you need a separate marketing authorisation. So a drug might be
licensed to treat ovarian cancer, for example, but not breast cancer. That
doesn't mean the drug doesn't work in breast cancer. There might well be
some evidence that it's great for treating that disease, too, but maybe the
company hasn't gone to the trouble and expense of getting a formal marketing
authorisation for that specific use. Doctors can still go ahead and
prescribe it for breast cancer, if they want, because the drug is available
for prescription, it probably works, and there are boxes of it sitting in
pharmacies waiting to go out. In this situation, the doctor will be
prescribing the drug legally, but "off-label".
Now, it turns out that
the use of a drug in children is treated as a separate marketing
authorisation from its use in adults. This makes sense in many cases,
because children can respond to drugs in very different ways and so research
needs to be done in children separately. But getting a licence for a
specific use is an arduous business, requiring lots of paperwork and some
specific studies. Often, this will be so expensive that companies will not
bother to get a licence specifically to market a drug for use in children,
because that market is usually much smaller.
So it is not unusual for
a drug to be licensed for use in adults but then prescribed for children.
Regulators have recognised that this is a problem, so recently they have
started to offer incentives for companies to conduct more research and
formally seek these licences.
When GlaxoSmithKline applied for a
marketing authorisation in children for paroxetine, an extraordinary
situation came to light, triggering the longest investigation in the history
of UK drugs regulation. Between 1994 and 2002, GSK conducted nine trials of
paroxetine in children. The first two failed to show any benefit, but the
company made no attempt to inform anyone of this by changing the "drug
label" that is sent to all doctors and patients. In fact, after these trials
were completed, an internal company management document stated: "It would be
commercially unacceptable to include a statement that efficacy had not been
demonstrated, as this would undermine the profile of paroxetine." In the
year after this secret internal memo, 32,000 prescriptions were issued to
children for paroxetine in the UK alone: so, while the company knew the drug
didn't work in children, it was in no hurry to tell doctors that, despite
knowing that large numbers of children were taking it. More trials were
conducted over the coming years -- nine in total -- and none showed that the
drug was effective at treating depression in children.
It gets much
worse than that. These children weren't simply receiving a drug that the
company knew to be ineffective for them; they were also being exposed to
side-effects. This should be self-evident, since any effective treatment
will have some side-effects, and doctors factor this in, alongside the
benefits (which in this case were nonexistent). But nobody knew how bad
these side-effects were, because the company didn't tell doctors, or
patients, or even the regulator about the worrying safety data from its
trials. This was because of a loophole: you have to tell the regulator only
about side-effects reported in studies looking at the specific uses for
which the drug has a marketing authorisation. Because the use of paroxetine
in children was "off-label", GSK had no legal obligation to tell anyone
about what it had found.
People had worried for a long time that
paroxetine might increase the risk of suicide, though that is quite a
difficult side-effect to detect in an antidepressant. In February 2003, GSK
spontaneously sent the MHRA a package of information on the risk of suicide
on paroxetine, containing some analyses done in 2002 from adverse-event data
in trials the company had held, going back a decade. This analysis showed
that there was no increased risk of suicide. But it was misleading: although
it was unclear at the time, data from trials in children had been mixed in
with data from trials in adults, which had vastly greater numbers of
participants. As a result, any sign of increased suicide risk among children
on paroxetine had been completely diluted away.
Later in 2003, GSK
had a meeting with the MHRA to discuss another issue involving paroxetine.
At the end of this meeting, the GSK representatives gave out a briefing
document, explaining that the company was planning to apply later that year
for a specific marketing authorisation to use paroxetine in children. They
mentioned, while handing out the document, that the MHRA might wish to bear
in mind a safety concern the company had noted: an increased risk of suicide
among children with depression who received paroxetine, compared with those
on dummy placebo pills.
This was vitally important side-effect data,
being presented, after an astonishing delay, casually, through an entirely
inappropriate and unofficial channel. Although the data was given to
completely the wrong team, the MHRA staff present at this meeting had the
wit to spot that this was an important new problem. A flurry of activity
followed: analyses were done, and within one month a letter was sent to all
doctors advising them not to prescribe paroxetine to patients under the age
of 18.
How is it possible that our systems for getting data from
companies are so poor, they can simply withhold vitally important
information showing that a drug is not only ineffective, but actively
dangerous? Because the regulations contain ridiculous loopholes, and it's
dismal to see how GSK cheerfully exploited them: when the investigation was
published in 2008, it concluded that what the company had done --
withholding important data about safety and effectiveness that doctors and
patients clearly needed to see -- was plainly unethical, and put children
around the world at risk; but our laws are so weak that GSK could not be
charged with any crime.
After this episode, the MHRA and EU changed
some of their regulations, though not adequately. They created an obligation
for companies to hand over safety data for uses of a drug outside its
marketing authorisation; but ridiculously, for example, trials conducted
outside the EU were still exempt. Some of the trials GSK conducted were
published in part, but that is obviously not enough: we already know that if
we see only a biased sample of the data, we are misled. But we also need all
the data for the more simple reason that we need lots of data: safety
signals are often weak, subtle and difficult to detect. In the case of
paroxetine, the dangers became apparent only when the adverse events from
all of the trials were pooled and analysed together.
That leads us to
the second obvious flaw in the current system: the results of these trials
are given in secret to the regulator, which then sits and quietly makes a
decision. This is the opposite of science, which is reliable only because
everyone shows their working, explains how they know that something is
effective or safe, shares their methods and results, and allows others to
decide if they agree with the way in which the data was processed and
analysed. Yet for the safety and efficacy of drugs, we allow it to happen
behind closed doors, because drug companies have decided that they want to
share their trial results discretely with the regulators. So the most
important job in evidence-based medicine is carried out alone and in secret.
And regulators are not infallible, as we shall see.
Rosiglitazone was
first marketed in 1999. In that first year, Dr John Buse from the University
of North Carolina discussed an increased risk of heart problems at a pair of
academic meetings. The drug's manufacturer, GSK, made direct contact in an
attempt to silence him, then moved on to his head of department. Buse felt
pressured to sign various legal documents. To cut a long story short, after
wading through documents for several months, in 2007 the US Senate committee
on finance released a report describing the treatment of Buse as
"intimidation".
But we are more concerned with the safety and
efficacy data. In 2003 the
Uppsala
drug monitoring group of the World Health Organisation contacted GSK
about an unusually large number of spontaneous reports associating
rosiglitazone with heart problems. GSK conducted two internal meta-analyses
of its own data on this, in 2005 and 2006. These showed that the risk was
real, but although both GSK and the FDA had these results, neither made any
public statement about them, and they were not published until 2008.
During this delay, vast numbers of patients were exposed to the drug, but
doctors and patients learned about this serious problem only in 2007, when
cardiologist Professor Steve Nissen and colleagues published a landmark
meta-analysis. This showed a 43% increase in the risk of heart problems in
patients on rosiglitazone. Since people with diabetes are already at
increased risk of heart problems, and the whole point of treating diabetes
is to reduce this risk, that finding was big potatoes. Nissen's findings
were confirmed in later work, and in 2010 the drug was either taken off the
market or restricted, all around the world.
Now, my argument is not
that this drug should have been banned sooner because, as perverse as it
sounds, doctors do often need inferior drugs for use as a last resort. For
example, a patient may develop idiosyncratic side-effects on the most
effective pills and be unable to take them any longer. Once this has
happened, it may be worth trying a less effective drug if it is at least
better than nothing.
The concern is that these discussions happened
with the data locked behind closed doors, visible only to regulators. In
fact, Nissen's analysis could only be done at all because of a very unusual
court judgment. In 2004, when GSK was caught out withholding data showing
evidence of serious side-effects from paroxetine in children, their bad
behaviour resulted in a US court case over allegations of fraud, the
settlement of which, alongside a significant payout, required GSK to commit
to posting clinical trial results on a public website.
Nissen used the
rosiglitazone data, when it became available, and found worrying signs of
harm, which they then published to doctors -- something the regulators had
never done, despite having the information years earlier. If this
information had all been freely available from the start, regulators might
have felt a little more anxious about their decisions but, crucially,
doctors and patients could have disagreed with them and made informed
choices. This is why we need wider access to all trial reports, for all
medicines.
Missing data poisons the well for everybody. If proper
trials are never done, if trials with negative results are withheld, then we
simply cannot know the true effects of the treatments we use. Evidence in
medicine is not an abstract academic preoccupation. When we are fed bad
data, we make the wrong decisions, inflicting unnecessary pain and
suffering, and death, on people just like us.
== This is an edited
extract from Bad Pharma, by Ben Goldacre, published next week by Fourth
Estate at 13.99-pounds. To order a copy for 11.19-pounds, including UK mainland p&p,
call 0330 333 6846, or go to
guardian.co.uk/bookshop.