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This is the first article the NY Times ran based on revelations Jim Gottstein of PsychRights supplied about fraud by Eli Lilly about Zyprexa. PsychRights is a sponsor group of MindFreedom.
Eli Lilly Said to Play Down Risk of Top Pill
Date Published:
Author: ALEX BERENSON
Source: The New York Times
The drug maker Eli Lilly has engaged in a decade-long effort to play down the health risks of Zyprexa, its best-selling medication for schizophrenia, according to hundreds of internal Lilly documents and e-mail messages among top company managers.
The documents, given
to The Times by a lawyer representing mentally ill patients, show that
Lilly executives kept important information from doctors about
Zyprexa’s links to obesity and its tendency to raise blood sugar — both
known risk factors for diabetes.
Lilly’s own published data,
which it told its sales representatives to play down in conversations
with doctors, has shown that 30 percent of patients taking Zyprexa gain
22 pounds or more after a year on the drug, and some patients have
reported gaining 100 pounds or more. But Lilly was concerned that
Zyprexa’s sales would be hurt if the company was more forthright about
the fact that the drug might cause unmanageable weight gain or
diabetes, according to the documents, which cover the period 1995 to
2004.
Zyprexa has become by far Lilly’s best-selling product,
with sales of $4.2 billion last year, when about two million people
worldwide took the drug.
Critics, including the American
Diabetes Association, have argued that Zyprexa, introduced in 1996, is
more likely to cause diabetes than other widely used schizophrenia
drugs. Lilly has consistently denied such a link, and did so again on
Friday in a written response to questions about the documents. The
company defended Zyprexa’s safety, and said the documents had been
taken out of context.
But as early as 1999, the documents show
that Lilly worried that side effects from Zyprexa, whose chemical name
is olanzapine, would hurt sales.
“Olanzapine-associated weight
gain and possible hyperglycemia is a major threat to the long-term
success of this critically important molecule,” Dr. Alan Breier wrote
in a November 1999 e-mail message to two-dozen Lilly employees that
announced the formation of an “executive steering committee for
olanzapine-associated weight changes and hyperglycemia.” Hyperglycemia
is high blood sugar.
At the time Dr. Breier, who is now Lilly’s chief medical officer, was the chief scientist on the Zyprexa program.
In
2000, a group of diabetes doctors that Lilly had retained to consider
potential links between Zyprexa and diabetes warned the company that
“unless we come clean on this, it could get much more serious than we
might anticipate,” according to an e-mail message from one Lilly
manager to another.
And in that year and 2001, the documents
show, Lilly’s own marketing research found that psychiatrists were
consistently saying that many more of their patients developed high
blood sugar or diabetes while taking Zyprexa than other antipsychotic
drugs.
The documents were collected as part of lawsuits on
behalf of mentally ill patients against the company. Last year, Lilly
agreed to pay $750 million to settle suits by 8,000 people who claimed
they developed diabetes or other medical problems after taking Zyprexa.
Thousands more suits against the company are pending.
On Friday,
in its written response, Lilly said that it believed that Zyprexa
remained an important treatment for patients with schizophrenia and
bipolar disorder. The company said it had given the Food and Drug
Administration all its data from clinical trials and reports of adverse
events, as it is legally required to do. Lilly also said it shared data
from literature reviews and large studies of Zyprexa’s real-world use.
“In summary, there is no scientific evidence establishing that Zyprexa causes diabetes,” the company said.
Lilly
also said the documents should not have been made public because they
might “cause unwarranted fear among patients that will cause them to
stop taking their medication.”
As did similar documents
disclosed by the drug maker Merck last year in response to lawsuits
over its painkiller Vioxx, the Lilly documents offer an inside look at
how a company marketed a drug while seeking to play down its side
effects. Lilly, based in Indianapolis, is the sixth-largest American
drug maker, with $14 billion in revenue last year.
The documents
— which include e-mail, marketing material, sales projections and
scientific reports — are replete with references to Zyprexa’s
importance to Lilly’s future and the need to keep concerns about
diabetes and obesity from hurting sales. But that effort became
increasingly difficult as doctors saw Zyprexa’s side effects, the
documents show.
In 2002, for example, Lilly rejected plans to
give psychiatrists guidance about how to treat diabetes, worrying that
doing so would tarnish Zyprexa’s reputation. “Although M.D.’s like
objective, educational materials, having our reps provide some with
diabetes would further build its association to Zyprexa,” a Lilly
manager wrote in a March 2002 e-mail message.
But Lilly did
expand its marketing to primary care physicians, who its internal
studies showed were less aware of Zyprexa’s side effects. Lilly sales
material encouraged representatives to promote Zyprexa as a “safe,
gentle psychotropic” suitable for people with mild mental illness.
Some
top psychiatrists say that Zyprexa will continue to be widely used
despite its side effects, because it works better than most other
antipsychotic medicines in severely ill patients. But others say that
Zyprexa appears no more effective overall than other medicines.
And
some doctors who specialize in diabetes care dispute Lilly’s assertion
that Zyprexa does not cause more cases of diabetes than other
psychiatric drugs. “When somebody gains weight, they need more insulin,
they become more insulin resistant,” Dr. Joel Zonszein, the director of
the clinical diabetes center at Montefiore Medical Center in the Bronx,
said when asked about the drug.
In 2003, after reviewing data
provided by Lilly and other drug makers, the F.D.A. said that the
current class of antipsychotic drugs may cause high blood sugar. It did
not specifically single out Zyprexa, nor did it say that the drugs had
been proven to cause diabetes.
The drugs are known as atypical
antipsychotics and include Johnson & Johnson’s Risperdal and
AstraZeneca’s Seroquel. When they were introduced in the mid-1990s,
psychiatrists hoped they would relieve mental illness without the
tremors and facial twitches associated with older drugs. But the new
drugs have not proven significantly better and have their own side
effects, said Dr. Jeffrey Lieberman, the lead investigator on a
federally sponsored clinical trial that compared Zyprexa and other new
drugs with one older one.
The Zyprexa documents were provided to
the Times by James B. Gottstein, a lawyer who represents mentally ill
patients and has sued the state of Alaska over its efforts to force
patients to take psychiatric medicines against their will. Mr.
Gottstein said the information in the documents raised public health
issues.
“Patients should be told the truth about drugs like Zyprexa,” Mr. Gottstein said.
Lilly
originally provided the documents, under seal, to plaintiffs lawyers
who sued the company claiming their clients developed diabetes from
taking Zyprexa. Mr. Gottstein, who is not subject to the
confidentiality agreement that covers the product liability suits,
subpoenaed the documents in early December from a person involved in
the suits.
In its statement, Lilly called the release of the
documents “illegal.” The company said it could not comment on specific
documents because of the continuing product liability suits.
In
some ways, the Zyprexa documents are reminiscent of those produced in
litigation over Vioxx, which Merck stopped selling in 2004 after a
clinical trial proved it caused heart problems. They treat very
different conditions, but Zyprexa and Vioxx are not entirely
dissimilar. Both were thought to be safer than older and cheaper drugs,
becoming bestsellers as a result, but turned out to have serious side
effects.
After being pressed by doctors and regulators, Merck
eventually did test Vioxx’s cardiovascular risks and withdrew the drug
after finding that Vioxx increased heart attacks and strokes.
Lilly
has never conducted a clinical trial to determine exactly how much
Zyprexa raises patients’ diabetes risks. But scientists say conducting
such a study would be exceedingly difficult, because diabetes takes
years to develop, and it can be hard to keep mentally ill patients
enrolled in a clinical trial.
When it was introduced, Zyprexa
was the third and most heralded of the atypical antipsychotics. With
psychiatrists eager for new treatments for schizophrenia, bipolar
disorder, and dementia, Zyprexa’s sales soared.
But as sales
grew, reports rolled in to Lilly and drug regulators that the medicine
caused massive weight gain in many patients and was associated with
diabetes. For example, a California doctor reported that 8 of his 35
patients on Zyprexa had developed high blood sugar, including two who
required hospitalization.
The documents show that Lilly
encouraged its sales representatives to play down those effects when
talking to doctors. In one 1998 presentation, for example, Lilly said
its salespeople should be told, “Don’t introduce the issue!!!”
Meanwhile, the company researched combinations of Zyprexa with several
other drugs, hoping to alleviate the weight gain. But the combinations
failed.
To reassure doctors, Lilly also publicly said that when
it followed up with patients who had taken Zyprexa in a clinical trial
for three years, it found that weight gain appeared to plateau after
about nine months. But the company did not discuss a far less
reassuring finding in early 1999, disclosed in the documents, that
blood sugar levels in the patients increased steadily for three years.
In
2000 and 2001, more warning signs emerged, the documents show. In four
surveys conducted by Lilly’s marketing department, the company found
that 70 percent of psychiatrists polled had seen at least one of their
patients develop high blood sugar or diabetes while taking Zyprexa,
compared with about 20 percent for Risperdal or Seroquel. Lilly never
disclosed those findings.
By mid-2003, Lilly began to change its
stance somewhat, publicly acknowledging that Zyprexa can cause severe
obesity. Marketing documents make clear that by then Lilly believed it
had no choice. On June 23, 2003, an internal committee reported that
Zyprexa sales were “below plan” and that doctors were
“switching/avoiding Zyprexa.”
Since then, Lilly has acknowledged
Zyprexa’s effect on weight but has argued that it does not necessarily
correlate to diabetes. But Zyprexa’s share of antipsychotic drug
prescriptions is falling, and some psychiatrists say they no longer
believe the information Lilly offers.
“From my personal
experience, at first my concerns about weight gain with this drug were
very significantly downplayed by their field representatives,” said Dr.
James Phelps, a psychiatrist in Corvallis, Or. ‘Their continued efforts
to downplay that, I think in retrospect, was an embarrassment to the
company.”
Dr. Phelps says that he tries to avoid Zyprexa because
of its side effects but sometimes still prescribes it, especially when
patients are acutely psychotic and considering suicide, because it
works faster than other medicines.
“I wind up using it as an
emergency medicine, where it’s superb,” he said. “But I’m trying to get
my patients off of Zyprexa, not put them on.”
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http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/17/business/17drug.html?ex=1166936400&en=49ecabeacfb44013&ei=5070&emc=eta1
More info on PsychRights see http://www.psychrights.org


