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Prescription For Trouble

Prescription For Trouble
Nov. 14, 2004
When the pharmaceutical giant Merck pulled its blockbuster
pain medication Vioxx off the market in late September, it
became the largest prescription drug recall in history.
The company says it took immediate action after a new study
showed that Vioxx doubled the risk of heart attacks and
strokes in some patients.
However, according to internal Merck documents 60 Minutes has
seen, and interviews with outside scientists, Merck had
concerns that Vioxx could possibly cause cardiovascular risks
long before it was pulled off the market.
Some 20 million Americans took Vioxx in the five-and-a-half
years it was being sold. It may have contributed to thousands
of heart attacks and sudden deaths. Three government
investigations are now underway to determine just how and why
Vioxx became a prescription for trouble. Correspondent Ed
Bradley reports.
When Vioxx first hit the market under a barrage of TV
commercials, it was hailed by Merck as a miracle drug.
It was one of a new class of drugs called COX-2 inhibitors
that could reduce all kinds of pain, especially arthritis,
without causing serious gastrointestinal discomfort and
bleeding - a risk seen in older drugs like aspirin, Aleve and
Advil.
With annual sales of about $2.5 billion, Vioxx was one of the
most successful new drugs ever. It was prescribed to people
like 39-year-old Janet Huggins, who had been diagnosed with
early stage rheumatoid arthritis.
According to her medical records, Huggins was in otherwise
excellent health. But that was until Sept. 25, when she died
of a sudden heart attack - less than a month after she started
taking Vioxx. She was buried on the very day Merck took Vioxx
off the market. Huggins' husband Monty is suing Merck, holding
the company responsible for her death.
"The morning of her funeral, I had just gotten dressed and my
sister walked in and told me that she had just seen on the
news that Vioxx had been pulled from the market. And when she
told me that, I can't explain what hit me," says Monty
Huggins. "I dropped straight to the floor. It was just a
shock, because this is a 39-year-old female that's in good
shape and is healthy and she's got a heart attack."
He says that if the drug had been taken off the market a month
earlier, "I believe my wife would be here."
But was it Vioxx? Merck says it believes that many of the
deaths being attributed to Vioxx could be explained by any
number of other causes. The company insists it has acted
responsibly, saying it withdrew Vioxx as soon as it received
what it says was surprising data from a clinical trial it was
conducting, called the APPROVe (Adenomatous Polyp Prevention
on VIOXX) study, designed to determine if Vioxx could prevent
colon polyps.
Instead, Merck found something potentially worse: Patients
taking Vioxx for longer than 18 months were twice as likely to
suffer a heart attack or stroke than those taking a placebo.
Merck declined a request from 60 Minutes for an on-camera
interview, but CEO Raymond Gilmartin explained the company's
decision in a Sept. 30 news conference: "We're taking this
action because we believe it best serves the interest of
patients. We believe that it would have been possible to
continue to market Vioxx with labeling that would incorporate
these new data. However, given the availability of alternative
therapies, and the questions raised by the data, we concluded
that a voluntary withdrawal is the responsible course to
take."
Merck maintains that the APPROVe study provided the first
clear evidence that Vioxx was linked to heart attacks and
strokes. But attorney Andy Birchfield is spearheading an
all-out legal assault against Merck.
Birchfield met this week with hundreds of plaintiff's lawyers
from across the country to coordinate their efforts in
lawsuits they will soon file against Merck on behalf of more
than 10,000 people who it's claimed were harmed or killed by
Vioxx.
"Merck knew, even before this drug went on the market, that
there could be a significant increase in cardiovascular risk.
To say that the APPROVe study was the first indication that
they had of a risk is absolutely untrue," says Birchfield.
"You know, they had warning sign after warning sign, study
after study, that suggested a significant, a substantial
increase in risk."
Why would they do this? "Merck needed a blockbuster drug. They
needed, they had drugs that were coming off patent and they
needed a - a big revenue source," says Birchfield.
Merck denies that profits would come before patient safety. In
1999, Merck conducted its biggest clinical trial of Vioxx - a
study of 8,000 people called the VIGOR (VIOXX Gastrointestinal
Outcomes Research) study. It was designed to determine if
Vioxx was safer on the stomach than an older pain medication
called Naproxen.
While the VIGOR study found that Vioxx caused fewer
gastrointestinal side effects than Naproxen, Vioxx users also
had a nearly five-fold increase in heart attacks. Merck
attributed the increase to what it believed was Naproxen's
ability to protect the heart, not to any problem with Vioxx.
However, an internal Merck email written by the company's
research president in March 2000 - the day he learned about
the results of the VIGOR study, and nearly a year after the
drug came on the market - said that heart problems "are
clearly there." And he said: "It is a shame, but it is a low
incidence and it is mechanism-based as we worried it was."
"Mechanism-based" refers to the molecular structure of the
drug.
Plaintiff's attorneys cite that and other Merck internal memos
and e-mails as far back as 1996, which they say show some
Merck scientists anticipated a higher rate of heart problems.
Merck says those emails reflect only hypothetical concerns,
and that there was not enough evidence at the time to prove
that Vioxx increased the risk of heart problems.
Dr. Eric Topol, chief of cardiovascular medicine at the
Cleveland Clinic, was Merck's first and most persistent
critic. In 2001, he conducted a statistical analysis of all
the available data about Vioxx. His study was published in the
Journal of the American Medical Association.
What did his study - which came out after the VIGOR study -
find?
"That study, which looked at all the data available for the
both the medicines of these COX-2 inhibitors and all other
medicines, including aspirin, that were available, showed a
very substantial worrying risk of heart attacks and strokes -
across the board - from the VIGOR trial and about Vioxx," says
Topol.
Topol examined data from a 1998 Merck clinical trial called
Study "090", which was never published. Among 978 patients
studied, serious cardiovascular events, including heart attack
and stroke - were found about six times more often in patients
taking Vioxx than in patients taking another arthritis drug or
a placebo.
Merck says that study was too small and not statistically
significant enough to be able to draw any conclusions, but
Topol maintains that, combined with the VIGOR trial, it showed
that by the year 2000, there was solid evidence that Vioxx was
not safe. Merck says Topol's methodology was flawed and
disputed his findings.
"Merck took on any study that questioned the safety of Vioxx,
with respect to the heart attacks and strokes. Any study,"
says Topol.
"But can't they say on the other hand, 'OK, there are always
dissenters. We've got these other studies that say the drug is
fine,'" asks Bradley.
"Whenever you find a problem and you're thinking maybe it's
not a problem, you want to see if there's independent
replication," says Topol. "So if you have Study '090', and you
want to discount that somehow, then you have VIGOR. You got
two trials now. You have essentially lightning striking twice.
That's independent replication, that's really serious
confirmation. This is unequivocal. This is a problem."
Did Topol ever talk to Merck officials about this? "I tried,"
he says. "I called Mr. Gilmartin, the CEO, and the director of
research, Dr. Peter Kim, on multiple occasions, asking to
discuss this. But the calls were never returned."
Merck says while it was concerned about the cardiovascular
risks seen in the VIGOR study, it was not conclusive evidence
that Vioxx caused heart attacks. And the company points out
that it conducted a number of studies before and after FDA
approval, which did not show the heart risk seen in the VIGOR
study.
As
safety questions about Vioxx continued to be raised in medical
journals, Merck continued its $500 million advertising
campaign. The company had developed a training document 60
Minutes obtained called "Dodge Ball Vioxx," which instructs
Merck sales representatives how to promote the drug to
physicians.
The manual consists of a 12-page list of obstacles. These are
questions a doctor could pose, such as "I am concerned about
the cardiovascular effects of Vioxx?"
A former Merck sales representative told 60 Minutes how she
was trained to answer that question. She asked that we not use
her name, and that we alter her appearance and voice.
"We were supposed to tell the physician that Vioxx did not
cause cardiovascular events, that instead, in the studies,
Naproxen has aspirin-like characteristics which made Naproxen
a heart-protecting type of drug where Vioxx did not have that
heart-protecting side," she said.
The FDA says there is no conclusive evidence that Naproxen
protects the heart. Merck told 60 Minutes the use of the word
"dodge" was unfortunate and that the company instructed its
sales force to be honest and straightforward about Vioxx.
The former sales representative we spoke to told us she feels
the company betrayed her: "I put my reputation on the line. I
gave my physicians my word that Vioxx was a safe, effective
product and it's been pulled from the market because it was
killing people."
Merck's marketing campaign didn't sit well with the FDA, which
sent a warning letter to the company in September 2001, saying
that sales representatives "have engaged in false or
misleading promotional activities," and that the company's
promotional campaign "minimizes the potentially serious
cardiovascular findings" about Vioxx.
Dr. Janet Woodcock, acting deputy commissioner of the FDA,
says her agency took appropriate action based on the Vioxx
studies. "Certainly we were concerned," says Woodcock.
"If you were concerned, you weren't concerned enough to pull
it off the market," says Bradley.
"That's correct. Here we had a new benefit, and I think it's
important to recognize that there are many thousands of deaths
every year from the gastrointestinal toxicity of the
anti-inflammatory agents," says Woodcock.
"This is a serious problem," she continues. "On the other
hand, we had a red flag for cardiovascular events. But we
didn't know what it meant. There were other studies that did
not show this increase with the ordinary dose of Vioxx. And
more study was needed to understand what this meant."
Looking back, was there anything the FDA should have done?
"I think we were on top of the case here," says Woodcock. "And
we did what we could to get all the evidence together and keep
information flowing."
The FDA says Merck made certain changes - including changing
the Vioxx package label in 2002 disclosing cardiovascular
risks. But that was more than a year after the FDA asked the
company to do so.
Sen. Charles Grassley, chairman of the Senate Finance
Committee, which is investigating Merck and the FDA, says the
FDA dropped the ball on Vioxx.
"With Vioxx being withdrawn by the company, with the prospect
that - that people may have died because this drug was not
safe, you just wonder where FDA has been," says Grassley.
"Because there were red flags about this drug both within the
FDA and within the Merck organization for a long period of
time, and you wonder why with all the questions being raised
it takes five years - for a drug to be pulled."
Less than two weeks ago, the British medical journal The
Lancet published a study that concluded, based on an analysis
of previous studies, Vioxx should have been "withdrawn several
years earlier."
While Merck disputes that finding, Topol says there is a
lesson to be learned. "In trying for now two decades in my
career to try to prevent heart attacks and treat heart
attacks, to have a medicine that's causing heart attacks and
strokes is something that can't be tolerated," says Topol.
"These are the two biggest, most important killers in our
society. And then it's important that we never have something
like this happen again."
Congressional hearings are set to begin later this week into
the Vioxx affair. The U.S. Justice Department is conducting an
investigation, and the Securities and Exchange Commission is
looking into the conduct of Merck. The company's stock value
has fallen by roughly $30 billion since Vioxx was pulled off
the market.
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