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"Federal laws already bar drug companies from paying
doctors to prescribe medicines in pill form. That
prohibition should be extended to injected and
intravenous medicines"
Doctors Reap Millions for Anemia
Drugs
NY Times
By ALEX BERENSON and ANDREW POLLACK
Published: May 9, 2007
Two of the world's largest drug companies are paying
hundreds of millions of dollars to doctors every
year in return for giving their patients anemia
medicines, which regulators now say may be unsafe at
commonly used doses.
The payments are legal, but very few people outside
of the doctors who receive them are aware of their
size. Critics, including prominent cancer and kidney
doctors, say the payments give physicians an
incentive to prescribe the medicines at levels that
might increase patients' risks of heart attacks or
strokes.
Industry analysts estimate that such payments - to
cancer doctors and the other big users of the drugs,
kidney dialysis centers - total hundreds of millions
of dollars a year and are an important source of
profit for doctors and the centers. The payments
have risen over the last several years, as the
makers of the drugs, Amgen and Johnson & Johnson,
compete for market share and try to expand the
overall business.
Neither Amgen nor Johnson & Johnson has disclosed
the total amount of the payments. But documents
given to The New York Times show that at just one
practice in the Pacific Northwest, a group of six
cancer doctors received $2.7 million from Amgen for
prescribing $9 million worth of its drugs last year.
Yesterday, the Food and Drug Administration added to
concerns about the drugs, releasing a report that
suggested that their use might need to be curtailed
in cancer patients. The report, prepared by F.D.A.
staff scientists, said no evidence indicated that
the medicines either improved quality of life in
patients or extended their survival, while several
studies suggested that the drugs can shorten
patients' lives when used at high doses. Yesterday's
report followed the F.D.A.'s decision in March to
strengthen warnings on the drugs' labels.
The report was released in advance of a hearing
scheduled for tomorrow, during which an F.D.A.
advisory panel will consider whether the drugs are
overused.
The medicines - Aranesp and Epogen, from Amgen; and
Procrit, from Johnson & Johnson - are among the
world's top-selling drugs, with combined sales of
$10 billion last year. In this country, they
represent the single biggest drug expense for
Medicare and are given to about a million patients
each year to treat anemia caused by kidney disease
or cancer chemotherapy.
Dr. Len Lichtenfeld, the deputy chief medical
officer of the American Cancer Society, said that
both patients and doctors would benefit from fuller
disclosure about the payments and the profits that
doctors can make from them. I suspect that Medicare
is going to take a very careful look at what is
going on here, he said.
Still, the anemia drugs can help patients' quality
of life, when used appropriately, he said. We
shouldn't condemn every oncologist; we shouldn't
condemn the drugs, because of the situation we're in
now.
Federal laws bar drug companies from paying doctors
to prescribe medicines that are given in pill form
and purchased by patients from pharmacies. But
companies can rebate part of the price that doctors
pay for drugs, like the anemia medicines, which
they dispense in their offices as part of treatment.
The anemia drugs are injected or given intravenously
in physicians' offices or dialysis centers.
Doctors receive the rebates after they buy the
drugs from the companies. But they also receive
reimbursement from Medicare or private insurers
for the drugs, often at a markup over the doctors'
purchase price.
Medicare has changed its payment structure since
2003 to reduce the markup, but private insurers
still often pay more. Combined with those insurance
reimbursements, the rebates enable many doctors to
profit substantially on the medicines they buy and
then give to patients.
The rebates are related to the amount of drugs that
doctors buy, and physicians that agree to use one
company's drugs exclusively typically receive higher
rebates.
Johnson & Johnson said yesterday in a statement that
its rebates were not intended to induce doctors to
use more medicine. Instead, the rebates reflect
intense competition in the market for the drugs, the
company said.
Amgen said that rebates were a normal commercial
practice and that it had always properly promoted
its drugs.
Amgen is dedicated to patient safety, said David
Polk, a spokesman. We believe our contracts support
appropriate anemia management and our product
promotion is always strictly within the label.
Both companies' stocks fell yesterday after release
of the F.D.A. report. Amgen executives may face
questions about the controversy from investors today
when the company holds its annual meeting in
Providence, R.I.
Since 1991, when the first of the drugs was still
relatively new, the average dose given to dialysis
patients in this country has nearly tripled. About
50 percent of dialysis patients now receive enough
of the drugs to raise their red blood cell counts
above the level considered risky by the F.D.A.
American patients receive far more of the anemia
drugs than patients elsewhere, with dialysis
patients in this country getting doses more than
twice as high as their counterparts in Europe.
Cancer care shows a similar pattern. American cancer
patients are about three times as likely as those in
Europe to get the drugs, and they receive somewhat
higher doses.
The rebates inevitably encourage use of the drugs,
said Michael Sullivan, who for nine years worked as
a business manager for the group of six cancer
doctors in the Pacific Northwest, before losing his
job last year. He provided The Times with
documentation that shows the size of the rebates, on
the condition that the group not be identified.
Personally, I think rebates should go away, said Mr.
Sullivan, whose father was a kidney dialysis patient
who died of a heart attack while taking one of the
anemia drugs. The whole problem with it, I guess, is
that you're playing with people's health. It's not
the same as buying widgets.
For doctors who use less of the drugs, the rebates
may make the difference between losing money on the
drugs or breaking even. Mr. Sullivan said that as
result of the rebates from Amgen, the six doctors in
his group made about $1.8 million in net profit on
the drugs they prescribed.
Unlike most drugs, the anemia medicines do not come
in fixed doses. Therefore, doctors have great
flexibility to increase dosing - and profits.
Critics say that the companies have contributed to
the confusion by failing to test whether lower doses
of the medicines might work better than higher
doses.
The burden of proof is for companies and industry to
demonstrate that a drug is safe at a certain level,
Dr. Ajay Singh, an associate professor at Harvard
Medical School. Dr. Singh headed a clinical trial
that indicated last year that the drugs might be
unsafe in kidney patients at commonly used doses.
Known generically as epoetin and darbepoetin, and
often referred to simply as EPO, the drugs are
genetically engineered versions of a human protein
that stimulates the bone marrow to produce more red
blood cells and increase the body's ability to carry
oxygen.
Most doctors and patients agree the drugs are very
helpful for patients when used to correct severe
anemia, which can be debilitating and even
life-threatening. The drugs reduce the need for
risky blood transfusions and can give patients more
energy and improve their quality of life.
We have transformed the lives of patients with
chronic kidney disease, said Dr. Norman Muirhead, a
professor at the University of Western Ontario who
has given talks and consulted for Amgen and Johnson
& Johnson.
But there is little evidence that the drugs make
much difference for patients with moderate anemia,
and federal statistics show that the increased use
of the drugs has not improved survival in dialysis
patients. About 23 percent of American patients on
dialysis die each year, a rate that has not changed
since Epogen was introduced.
Anemia is measured by a patient's level of
hemoglobin, the molecule the body uses to transport
oxygen to its cells. Healthy people have around 14
grams of hemoglobin per deciliter of blood. Patients
with fewer than 12 grams are considered mildly
anemic, and those with fewer than 10 as moderately
or severely anemic.
The labels on the drugs, as currently approved by
the F.D.A., encourage doctors to aim for a
hemoglobin level of 10 to 12. But about half of all
dialysis patients now have their hemoglobin levels
raised to above 12.
Critics of the drugs say their increased use has
been driven by profit. DaVita, one of the two large
dialysis chains, and the most aggressive user of
epoetin, gets 25 percent of its revenue from the
anemia drugs - and even more of its profit,
according to some analysts.
Dr. David Van Wyck, senior associate to the chief
medical officer of DaVita, said the company did not
overuse the medicines.
Doctors determine how much to use, Dr. Van Wyck
said. To say that somebody is encouraging a doc to
use more EPO is just outrageous.
Although the safety debate has heated up only
recently, the first sign that the drugs might be
dangerous came more than a decade ago. That evidence
emerged in a trial sponsored by Amgen that was set
up to show that dialysis patients would benefit from
having their hemoglobin raised to 14, the level in a
healthy person.
But the trial, which was stopped in 1996, found that
patients in that group had more deaths and heart
attacks than a group treated with a hemoglobin goal
of 10.
That trial should have discouraged doctors from
using too much epoetin and encouraged Amgen to study
the risks further, said Dr. Steven Fishbane, a
nephrologist at Winthrop-University Hospital on Long
Island.
Instead, use of epoetin continued to soar. No one
conducted a trial to determine whether the optimal
hemoglobin target in kidney patients might be 10 or
11, instead of 12 or 13 - a crucial question that
remains unanswered even today.
Dr. Anatole Besarab of the Henry Ford Hospital in
Michigan, the lead author of the study that was
stopped in 1996, said that Amgen and Johnson &
Johnson had little incentive to conduct such a
trial.
Dr. Robert M. Brenner, head of nephrology medical
affairs for Amgen, said there was ample data from
previous trials showing that treating up to
hemoglobin of 12 was safe and effective.
Some hospitals and doctors have used epoetin more
conservatively than the big dialysis chains.
Dr. Ronald A. Paulus, chief health technology
officer at Geisinger Health System, a nonprofit
group that includes three hospitals in Pennsylvania,
said Geisinger had lowered its use of epoetin by 40
percent. Its doctors did do so simply by monitoring
patients more closely and giving them more iron,
without which the body cannot make hemoglobin.
Dr. N. D. Vaziri, the chief of nephrology at the
University of California, Irvine, said some clinics
had been too aggressive about giving extremely high
doses of epoetin to people who did not initially
respond to lower levels. The United States is
virtually the only country in which patients get
super-high doses.
You create a toxicity situation, said Dr. Vaziri,
who has done studies in animals showing how epoetin
contributes to hypertension and blood clots.
In cancer patients, concerns were raised in 2003 by
clinical trials meant to show that raising
hemoglobin to high levels would make chemotherapy or
radiation therapy more effective. Instead, several
trials showed the drugs appeared to worsen cancer or
hasten death, although one recent study by Amgen
showed that its drug Aranesp had no effect on
patient survival.
The conflicting studies are among the issues the
F.D.A. advisory committee is expected to discuss
tomorrow. Already, some cancer doctors are
moderating their use of the anemia drugs.
Dr. Peter Eisenberg, an oncologist in Marin County,
Calif., said many doctors had been induced to use
more epoetin by the financial incentives and the
belief that the drug was helpful.
The deal was so good, he said. The indication was so
clear and the downside was so small that docs just
worked it into their practice easily.
VCU Doctors Say There's Now a Cure for Hepatitis
C
Reported by Kristina Cruise
May 21, 2007
A team of doctors at Virginia Commonwealth
University say there is now a proven cure for
Hepatitis C. The Hepatitis C virus is transferred
via blood mostly through illegal drug injections.
Researchers say peginterferon, or a combination of
that drug and ribavirin, is a proven cure for the
Hepatitis C virus. 99 percent of patients studied
had no detectable virus up to seven years later.
"The reason we can cure Hepatitis C with
peginterfone and ribavirin is because of the
mechanism of action of these two drugs," said Dr.
Mitchell Shiffman. "They work to both suppress the
virus and then stimulate the immune system to
eradicate the virus from the body."
Hepatitis C is a disease of the liver and a leading
cause of cirrhosis, liver cancer and the need for a
liver transplant. According to the CDC, four million
people have been infected. Eighty percent of those
infected have no signs or symptoms.
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