Pubdate: Sat, 3 Apr 1999 Source: British Medical Journal (UK) Section: Letters Copyright: 1999 by the British Medical Journal. Contact: http://www.bmj.com/ Author: Dr. Laurence Landow FDA APPROVES DRUGS EVEN WHEN EXPERTS ON ITS ADVISORY PANELS RAISE SAFETY QUESTIONS EDITOR After reading the editorial questioning whether the Food and Drug Administration is approving drugs too fast I was perplexed by the conclusion"probably not."[ref 1] Apparently the authors failed to read the transcript of the meeting of the administration's advisory committee for mibefradil (NDA 20-689), which is on the administration's website one of three drugs recently recalled by the administration because of deaths and serious morbidity. If they had read this transcript they would have been overwhelmed by the number of disturbing signals from committee members throughout the document (page numbers refer to the Acrobat version): "I'm afraid that we are rushing into this" (p 199); "I think it's concerning that the mortality data look the way they do right now" (p 202); "given the fact that there are a lot of other effective therapies out there, why not be safe with the public?" (p 205); "I think it's premature [to approve the product] (p 209); "aren't we obligated to provide some assurance that the ECG (electrocardiographic) changes we've seen here today are not ultimately lethal?" (p 127); "I sure don't feel good about what I've seen" [referring to electrocardiographic changes] (p 126); "you have 8 deaths in the patients treated with mibefradil and 1 death in the placebo or control populations" (p 135); "are you really comfortable, with so little mortality data, ... that it's safe?" (p 138), etc. To conclude, as the editorial does, that serious adverse events are inevitable and "one more bittersweet fact of medical progress" is too facile. A more plausible explanation recognises that, for some time, formidable forces both political and economic have insisted that new drugs and devices be approved more quickly than ever before by the administration. This interpretation agrees with the view held by many healthcare policy academics, patient advocate organisations, and consumer watchdog groups. They argue that in the past few years the Food and Drug Administration's role has changed. Rather than regulating the drug industry to protect the health of consumers of prescription drugs, the administration has become the industry's partner, rapidly approving drugs for marketing even when medical experts on its own advisory panels raise serious safety questions. Although one may not entirely agree with this outlook, it does provide an explanation for much of the evidence that Kleinke and Gottlieb seem to have overlooked. Laurence Landow, Instructor in anesthesia, Harvard Medical School. Brigham and Women's Hospital, 75 Francis Street, Boston, MA 02115, From 1996 to 1998 Dr Landow was a medical officer and acting team leader in the Anesthetic and Critical Care Drugs Section of the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research at the Food and Drug Administration. Reference 1.Kleinke JD, Gottlieb S. Is the FDA approving drugs too fast? BMJ 1998; 317: 899. (3 October.) - --- MAP posted-by: Patrick Henry