"First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win."
- Mahatma Gandhi
 
Top News arrow Drug Safety Issues arrow Editorial: Patients Deserve Facts Re: Antipsychotic Drug
Editorial: Patients Deserve Facts Re: Antipsychotic Drug Print E-mail
Monday, 16 February 2009
A forceful editorial by the St. Petersburg Times cuts through the Bull: "There is altogether too much secrecy in court cases that implicate public health."
The editorial , a follow-up to Kris Hundley's report about AstraZeneca's disingenuous arguments to keep under seal internal documents detailing hazardous effects linked to its' antipsychotic drug, Seroquel.

The editors were not impressed with the company's argument that keeping information about drug safety secret was "for the public good."  
 "What the company really means is that disclosure could make drug consumers more aware of any downside risks of taking Seroquel — which might take a bite out of revenues."

The editors call upon the legal system to "put public health--and a patient's right to know--above a company's interest in secrecy."

And the editorial chides judges to put themselves in the shoes of an ordinary citizen who wants to know what there is to know about the effects of a drug: "If the records being held back contain information that the judge would like to know before taking Seroquel, then the public should know as well. No other interest should take precedence."  

On Feb. 13, 2009, Bloomberg L.P. filed a motion US District Court in Florida, seeking access to the judicial records and memorandum of law to all cases involving Seroquel product liability. Case 6:06-md-01769-ACC-DAB, Document 1284, Filed 02/13/2009

Contact: Vera Hassner Sharav


St. Petersburg Times  
Editorial Patients deserve facts about drug
Tuesday, February 17, 2009

 Pharmaceutical companies spend millions each year to market drugs to doctors and potential patients. That makes it all the more outrageous that AstraZeneca is asking an Orlando court to keep information about the performance of its lucrative antipsychotic drug Seroquel secret.

The company is claiming public safety, saying it shouldn't be required to release information about the drug that could cause a panic among "a vulnerable patient population" that might stop taking the drug without a doctor's oversight. But the real public safety issue is one of public health and whether the company hid findings that Seroquel causes weight gain and diabetes. The legal system must put public health — and a patient's right to know — above a company's interest in secrecy.

Seroquel has been approved for treatment of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, but the drug is widely prescribed for other health problems such as depression and insomnia. Last year, this blockbuster drug racked up $4.5 billion in sales and was prescribed to more than 22 million people.

But there have been serious questions about potential side effects. AstraZeneca is facing more than 9,000 personal injury lawsuits filed by at least 15,000 patients. Forty percent of these cases have been consolidated in federal court in Orlando.

The lawyers for patients say that AstraZeneca knew for nearly a decade that Seroquel caused weight gain and diabetes. As Times staff writer Kris Hundley reported Sunday, a hearing is scheduled for Feb. 26 on the public disclosure of documents produced during the trial's discovery phase, including unpublished results of drug studies and notes of company sales representatives on marketing strategies.

The plaintiffs' lawyers want the court to unseal the documents. AstraZeneca wants the seal to remain and the hearing to be closed to the public. The company claims that disclosure could jeopardize public safety by causing "confusion and alarm" and prompting patients to end treatment.

What the company really means is that disclosure could make drug consumers more aware of any downside risks of taking Seroquel — which might take a bite out of revenues.

It would not be the first time a drug company is suspected of putting profits before public health. Internal documents on the Eli Lilly drug Zyprexa, also an antipsychotic, indicated that the drugmaker ignored evidence that its drug was causing weight gain and diabetes. Those documents were put under seal, and had it not been for an expert witness who disseminated them against court orders, the public may never have been sufficiently warned. Since then Lilly pleaded guilty to marketing Zyprexa illegally and paid a record $1.4 billion in fines.

AstraZeneca points out it won its first two cases, with the judge finding that the patients had not successfully linked their health problems to Seroquel. That doesn't lessen the public's interest in the results of clinical trials and what the company's sales representatives were saying about the drug.

There is altogether too much secrecy in court cases that implicate public health. If the records being held back contain information that the judge would like to know before taking Seroquel, then the public should know as well. No other interest should take precedence.  

 
< Prev   Next >
(C) 2012 Alliance for Human Research Protection
CMS installation and website development by Anne Krauss

General Terms & Disclaimer:

This site is not a monologue of truth. It is a catalyst for public debate about medical research conduct. The reader is urged to confront officials to clarify issues mentioned herein. This site is designed strictly to provide information for critical, literary, academic an public usage. A qualified and trustworthy medical professional must be consulted regarding medical issues, treatments, diagnoses, etc.

Please read the General Terms and Conditions of this agreement entirely and carefully before accessing this web site. By accessing the site, you agree to be bound by the terms and conditions listed herein. [continue]