« Ortho-McNeil's Response To April 2008 NYT Article About Ortho Evra And FDA / Federal Preemption | Main | April 2008: FDA Web Site Adds Two New Pages For Learning About Drug Safety »

Ortho Evra, Preemption, And The New York Times: Another Drug Company Response Letter

And, We Learn About More Of Merck's Vioxx Shenanigans -- Another Benefit Of Pharmaceutical Product Liability Litigation

(Posted by Tom Lamb at DrugInjuryWatch.com)

For the second time in as many weeks, it was the Johnson & Johnson (J&J) company blog that tipped us off that Ortho-McNeil is responding to an item from The New York Times by posting a letter on the Ortho Evra web site.

To start, on April 14, 2008 the Times ran an editorial, "The Dangers in Pre-emption", which begins:

The pharmaceutical industry and its good friends in the Bush administration are working hard to prevent consumers from filing damage suits for injuries caused by federally approved drug products. They may soon get a helping hand from the Supreme Court, which has already barred many suits over faulty medical devices....

Next, here's the same-day post on the J&J blog, titled "ORTHO EVRA and Preemption — Revisited":

Today, The New York Times editorial page commented on the concept of preemption, basing much of their position on an April 6 New York Times article on the same subject and once again featuring ORTHO EVRA®, the birth control patch marketed in the U.S. by our Ortho-McNeil unit. Today, Ortho-McNeil published a letter from David Norton, the Company Group Chairman, Worldwide Commercial and Operations, who is responsible for the Ortho-McNeil business that provides more context from our perspective for those who are interested.

If you prefer, go directly to this "April 13, 2008 Employee Follow-up Communication", written by Ortho-McNeil's David Y. Norton.

Meanwhile, in a convenient coincidence, in the past couple of days there has been a tremendous amount of media coverage given to the discovery that Merck used "ghostwriters" for Vioxx articles and failed to disclose to the FDA an internal analysis which found Alzheimer's patients who were taking Vioxx in a clinical study sponsored by Merck had a three times greater risk of death than patients taking a placebo.

As summarized by Peggy Peck for MedPage Today in an April 15, 2008 online article, "Rofecoxib (Vioxx) Studies on Mortality Were Controlled by Drug Company":

Ongoing litigation about rofecoxib (Vioxx) has provided confirmation that Merck employees or hired ghostwriters were the true authors of manuscripts about the drug published as the work of academic researchers.

That finding was published in the April 16 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association along with a second study -- also mined from a paper flood uncovered by lawyers -- that suggests Merck manipulated data to hide an increased mortality risk with rofecoxib.

Bruce M. Psaty, M.D., Ph.D., and Richard A. Kronmal, Ph.D., of the University of Washington in Seattle, said Merck told the FDA that an intention-to-treat analysis of data from three trials designed to assess the effects of rofecoxib on the occurrence or progression of Alzheimer's disease revealed an increased mortality risk with the drug....

The underlying study is "Reporting Mortality Findings in Trials of Rofecoxib for Alzheimer Disease or Cognitive Impairment: A Case Study Based on Documents From Rofecoxib Litigation (JAMA. 2008;299(15):1813-1817).

For additional detail, we turn to "Merck May Have Misrepresented Vioxx Risks", by Anna Sophia McKenney, and posted April 16, 2008 at Medical News Today: 

The risk-benefit profile of rofecoxib (marketed under the names Vioxx, Ceoxx and Ceeoxx) may be have been misrepresented by the study sponsor, Merck, in clinical trials with patients with cognitive impairment. This was the result of a comparison of internal company documents, data submitted by the company to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA,) and published clinical trial results, according to an article in the April 16 issues of JAMA....

... These documents were made available during litigation related to rofecoxib and Merck, including internal company analyses and information provided by the sponsor to the Food and Drug Administration....

It seems to me that this conduct by Ortho-McNeil and Merck demonstrates that federal preemption is a concept which does not fit the reality of how drug companies "interact" with FDA officials as regards the safety of their products.  Likewise, what we have learned about Ortho Evra and Vioxx as the result of pharmceutical product liability litigation shows why preemption is a bad idea.

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8341c89dd53ef00e551d850698833

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Ortho Evra, Preemption, And The New York Times: Another Drug Company Response Letter:

Comments

My Photo

Get New Posts By Email, Free

RSS Feed

  • FeedBurner

Search Engine

  • Google

    WWW
    www.drug-injury.com

Advisory

  • You should not stop taking any prescription drug before talking to your doctor.

Case Review

Sponsored By

Web 2.0 Tools

  • Add to Technorati Favorites
AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Twitter Updates

    follow me on Twitter

    Tips & Tidbits


    Resources

    • ConsumerMedSafety.org
      A portal of information provided by the Institute for Safe Medication Practices.
    • Drug Interaction Checker
      Program alerts patients to some drug-drug interaction possibilities when taking two or more prescription drugs.
    • FDA MedWatch
      MedWatch is the U.S. FDA site for safety information on prescription drugs and other medical products.
    • Health Canada MedEffect
      Health Canada's MedEffect site provides drug product safety announcements and other information for patients.
    • Medication Errors Reporting Program (MERP)
      Submit a confidential report to national voluntary program.
    • NIH MedlinePlus
      MedlinePlus will direct you to information that will help answer health questions.
    • Patient Medical Records Copying Cost Statutes
      State statutes that control what amount can be charged when patient requests their own medical records in U.S.
    • PDRhealth.com
      Based on most trusted database of prescription drug information, Physicians’ Desk Reference.
    • PharmedOut
      Intended to help prescribers identify and counter inappropriate pharmaceutical promotion practices.

    Sites to See

    Other News

    Common Feed

    • FeedBurner

    Affiliations

    • US Business Directory & Local Blogs
    • lawyer blogs
    • Medicine Blogs - BlogCatalog Blog Directory
    • Law Blogs - Blog Top Sites
    • Blog
    • Alltop, all the top stories
    • BlogBurst.com

    Blog Archives

    Custom Feeds

    • Add Drug Injury Watch to Newsburst from CNET News.com

    • Add to My AOL

    • Subscribe in NewsGator Online

    • Add to Google

    • Subscribe in Bloglines

    HitTail.com

    Disclaimer


    • DRUG INJURY WATCH is for general information purposes only, and should not be regarded as medical advice or legal advice.... (For more, please see the About page.)

    See You Again