Pubdate: Sat, 28 Nov 1998 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Contact: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Copyright: 1998 Mercury Center Author: Lisa M. Krieger (Mercury News Staff Writer) and Wire Reports TOUGH RULES FOR KID DRUGS FDA: Improve Safety Testing WASHINGTON - The government Friday issued new rules that require drug companies to conduct much wider testing of drugs in children, so the companies can write labels that provide detailed information to doctors and parents about the proper use of medications by children. The final rules, issued by the Food and Drug Administration, were a top priority for President Clinton and Hillary Rodham Clinton but met with strenuous objections from many drug companies, which said they were impractical and burdensome. Pediatricians and patients' groups praised the rules. ``This is a good thing. Children are not just little grown-ups,'' said Dr. Lucy S. Crain, chairwoman of the California Division of the American Academy of Pediatrics. Because children have immature kidneys and livers, they metabolize medicines differently than adults, Crain said. It is inappropriate, and potentially dangerous, to calculate doses by simply downsizing adult doses, she said. ``The correct dosages of many life-saving drugs, like anti-cancer chemotherapeutic agents, have not been calculated for use in children,'' she said. The new FDA regulations will also guide parents in the use of common over-the-counter drugs like adult Tylenol and cold medications, Crain said. For children under the age of 2, almost all medicines lack important dosage information, said Crain, a San Francisco pediatrician who practices at UC-San Francisco Medical Center. The White House said drug companies rarely did the studies needed to assess the safety and proper dosage of drugs widely used to treat childhood illnesses. Instead, many drugs prescribed for children were tested only in adults, with an assumption that the drugs' effects on children would be very similar. About 20 percent of the drugs marketed in the United States have been tested and labeled specifically for children. Shared Goal Drug companies said they shared Clinton's goal of discovering better medicines for children. But they said the new tests would be costly and could be unethical, because they might put thousands of children at risk. Under the rules issued Friday, pharmaceutical companies must generally study the safety and effectiveness of drugs and vaccines in children ``if the product is likely to be used in a substantial number of pediatric patients,'' or if it provides a ``meaningful therapeutic benefit'' over existing treatments for children in the same age group. To gain FDA approval for their products, drug companies will ordinarily have to submit data showing their ``safety and effectiveness and benefits and risks'' in children. Despite commitments by drug companies to do more studies in children, ``the percentage of new products entering the marketplace with adequate pediatric safety and effectiveness information has not increased in the last decade,'' the agency said. ``It is not profitable for pharmaceutical companies to do testing of medicines in kids,'' said pediatrician Dr. Dean Didech of San Jose Medical Group. The final rules are, in some ways, more flexible than the proposals issued by the Clinton administration in August 1997. Under the final rules, for example, the FDA may allow a company to defer testing in children until clinical trials suggest that a new drug is safe and effective in adults. Indeed, the agency said, in some cases, pediatric testing will occur after a new drug has been approved for use by adults. Various Factors Rather than impose a rigid, uniform rule for all new drugs, the government said that the timing of pediatric studies would depend on various factors. If, for example, a new drug is urgently needed to treat a life-threatening disease in children and if there is no adequate therapy on the market, the government may insist that the manufacturer immediately begin tests in children, before full data on adults are available. But pediatric studies could begin later if similar medications were already available for children. Judith Bello, executive vice president of the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, a trade association for the industry, said Friday, ``We haven't seen the final rules and won't be able to comment today.'' In written comments on the proposed rules, drug companies including Merck, Glaxo Wellcome, Novartis and Wyeth-Ayerst said they wanted to discover better medicines for children, but found the details of Clinton's proposal extremely impractical and burdensome. Moreover, the companies said that children injured in drug tests might file lawsuits years later, after they grow up, even though parents gave consent for the tests. The companies said they could not obtain informed consent from children as they do from adults. In response, the Clinton administration said that children need not be exposed to ``inappropriate risks'' because drug companies could defer pediatric testing until new drugs were shown to be safe and effective for adults. The rules will be published next week in the Federal Register and will take effect, with the force of law, on April 1. - --- Checked-by: derek rea