Pubdate: Tue, 12 Oct 1999 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 1999 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Forum: http://www10.nytimes.com/comment/ Author: Denise Grady TOO MUCH OF A GOOD THING? DOCTOR CHALLENGES DRUG MANUAL When doctors need information about what dose of medicine to prescribe, they usually consult a fat navy blue book called the Physicians' Desk Reference -- P.D.R. for short -- which is an extensive compilation of data about drugs from their manufacturers. But the doses recommended in the P.D.R. may be too high for many people and may cause adverse reactions, ranging from dizziness and nausea all the way to death, according to an article published last month in the journal Postgraduate Medicine. For many drugs -- including Viagra, Prozac and some medicines used to treat high blood pressure, allergies, insomnia and high cholesterol -- smaller doses would work just as well as the standard ones, with far less risk of bad reactions, said the author of the article, Dr. Jay S. Cohen, an associate professor of psychiatry at the University of California at San Diego. "Side effects drive a lot of people out of treatment that they need," Dr. Cohen said, noting that people with chronic conditions like high blood pressure, headaches and depression often give up trying to treat their illnesses when they find that the cure is worse than the disease. But if doctors were to individualize dosages for each patient, more people might take their medicine. Dr. Cohen said he became aware of the problem because he encountered many patients who suffered from side effects even though they had taken what were supposedly the correct doses of medicine. When Dr. Cohen consulted medical journals and textbooks, he discovered studies showing that many patients were helped by smaller than usual amounts of medication. And many of his own patients did better with reduced doses. He said his findings helped explain a study published last year by other researchers, who reported that drug reactions in hospitals were among the nation's leading causes of death, killing more than 100,000 Americans a year. The deaths that the team studied were not due to medication errors by doctors or patients; they occurred in people taking doses thought to be correct. But Dr. Cohen thinks many of the patients died because they were taking too much medicine: the "correct" doses were too strong for them. People vary greatly in their sensitivity to drugs, he said, and one person's remedy may be another's overdose. Although weight, age and sex help determine how a dose of medicine will affect someone, it is also possible for two people who are identical in those traits to react quite differently to the same dose of the same drug. Dosing guidelines from drug companies may be right for most people, but too high for "large subsets of patients," Dr. Cohen said. Dosing guidelines generally tend to be too high because they are based on studies conducted in limited numbers of patients by drug companies when they are seeking approval for new products, Dr. Cohen said. For those studies to run efficiently, doses need to be high enough to show as quickly as possible that the drug works. But later, after the drug is approved, far more people take it, sometimes along with other drugs, and individual differences begin to show up. That information does not always make it into the P.D.R., Dr. Cohen said. Dr. Peter Honig, deputy director of the office of postmarketing risk assessment at the Food and Drug Administration, said, "We learn a lot about a drug after it's been approved. I think we would agree with that. I think he makes some good points. Individualized dosing is the way to go. But it's not well taught in medical school." Dr. David Bates, an associate professor of medicine at the Harvard Medical School, called Dr. Cohen's idea an interesting hypothesis. "In the elderly, it's clear that you want to start with lower doses," said Dr. Bates, who has written about adverse reactions for medical journals. "In them in particular it's quite clear that you get in trouble if you use a 'one size fits all' dosing, which doctors have tended to do. It may well be for younger people, too, that there's considerable variability in the way drugs are broken down." Doctors are taught to "start low, go slow," Dr. Bates said, when prescribing medicines for people over 60 or 65, but that the advice may apply to younger patients as well. Dr. Raymond Woosley, chairman of the department of pharmacology at Georgetown University in Washington, called Dr. Cohen's article "an outstanding paper, and a very important message." Dr. Woosley named several drugs with recommended doses that he considered too high, including Viagra and the over-the-counter allergy medicine Chlortrimeton. In addition, he said, the AIDS drug AZT was first marketed at doses that turned out to be far too high and that had to be reduced. Dr. Cohen said doctors might identify some people at risk for reactions by asking patients whether they had ever had an adverse reaction to a drug and whether they considered themselves unusually sensitive to medications or prone to side effects. Having a strong reaction to a little bit of alcohol or caffeine may also be a clue that a patient will be very sensitive to medicines, he said. Drugs that have caused trouble in the past should be avoided, he said, and people who seem very sensitive to medicines can be started on low doses, which can be gradually increased if necessary. Some pills, but not capsules, can be cut to fine-tune doses. But Dr. Woosley said that in his experience a bad reaction to one medicine could not be used to predict how a patient would fare with others. Dr. Cohen cautioned that patients should not begin tinkering with doses of prescription drugs on their own. He said they needed to work with doctors to adjust the doses safely. With some drugs, doses cannot be changed: for example, antibiotics, antivirals and other medications used to treat infections must be taken full strength, according to the directions on the label. And in emergencies, he said, it is always safest to stick with the recommended doses. A spokesman for Medical Economics Inc., publisher of the P.D.R., said that the information in the book was supplied by drug manufacturers and approved by the Food and Drug Administration. Dr. Carl Peck, a former director of the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research at the Federal drug agency, said, "One dose fits all is a marketing myth, but it's the holy grail that every drug company tries to achieve." While at the drug agency, Dr. Peck conducted a study that showed that some drugs did come to market from 1980 to 1993 with dosing advice that had to be lowered. But, he said, that is less likely to occur today because during the last decade drug manufacturers have begun to study ranges of doses in the trials done before drugs are approved. Some newer drugs, like cholesterol lowering agents and a nose spray for allergies, come with labeling that gives a recommended dose range and advises doctors to try to find the lowest effective dose. Dr. Peck is now director of the center for drug development science at the Georgetown University Medical Center. "The whole issue of getting the dose right has become an important focus for the F.D.A.," Dr. Peck said, "and I think the F.D.A. and the drug companies are making a good-faith effort to do better these days." - --- MAP posted-by: manemez j lovitto