The Voice of Epidemiology

    
    


    Web EpiMonitor

► Home ► About ► News ► Jobs ► Events ► Resources ► Contact

Keynotes

Humor Quotes Wit & Wisdom EpiSource Miscellany Editor's Tips Triumphs Links Archives
 


Epi Wit & Wisdom Articles

Asthma Drug Controversy Climaxes

With Government Decision to Restrict Use

Episode is Case Study of Pressures in Epidemiology Today

[Editor’s note: The following story has been pieced together from interviews and from a variety of written materials including newspaper accounts, copies of correspondence, letters to the editor, company statements, government pronouncements, abstracts and original articles.]

A New Zealand Department of Health decision to restrict the use of the asthma drug fenoterol has brought to an end the latest chapter in a year long controversy over the findings from two case-control studies. Over the course of the battle, questions have been raised about the actions taken by the Lancet in publishing the study, by Boehringer Ingelheim (BI), the manufacturer of the drug, in defending its product, by the Department of Health in regulating the drug, by the Asthma Task Force (ATF) and the Medicines and Adverse Reactions Committee (MARC) in providing advice to the government, by individual epidemiologists in reviewing the study, and by the media in covering the story.

An understanding of the key events and the issues raised is of interest to epidemiologists because the profession is currently striving to obtain a grip on the ethical issues it faces and to fashion useful guidelines. The fenoterol story provides an example of some of the forces at work in epidemio]ogy today and may be useful as a case study.

First Chapter

The first chapter in the story began in December 1988 when researchers at the University of Wellington in New Zealand prepared a report of a case control study showing that the relative risk of asthma death in patients prescribed fenoterol by metered dose inhaler was 1.55. Sub-group analyses showed a relative risk as high as 13 for patients with the most severe asthma (Lancet 04/29/89). The authors concluded that their findings were consistent with the hypothesis that use of fenoterol increases the risk of death in severe asthma.

Public Health Implications

Because of the potential public health importance of these findings, the results were transmitted to the Department of Health which asked for an independent review by a panel headed by Australian Stephen Leeder. At the same time, the new data were under review by the Asthma Task Force (ATF) which had been constituted by the New Zealand Medical Research Council (MRC) to investigate New Zealand’s asthma epidemic which began in the late 1970’s. According to the Christchurch Star, the ATF conducted the largest study of asthma mortality ever undertaken between 1981 - 84, and raw data from this project were obtained and analyzed separately by Julian Crane and colleagues for their Lancet report.

The Leeder panel concluded that “Assuming the basic data to be correct, these findings are sufficient to justify public health action.” The ATF, which according to the investigators had been critical of the Crane et al. study prior to the review panel findings, seemed to accept the panel’s findings and the results of a later validation exercise which showed that data had been recorded properly. Nevertheless, the Director General of Health, who also received advice from the Medicines Adverse Reactions Committee (MARC), decided that “no pre-publication action is required by this office to in any way influence the availability of use of fenoterol in New Zealand.”

The reluctance of the Department of Health to act at this time to restrict the use of fenoterol was reportedly fueled by continuing criticisms of the study by members of the ATF, by the advice of the MARC, and by criticisms from individual epidemiologists hired by BI to evaluate the findings.

Next Chapter

The next chapter unfolds between the time the manuscript was submitted for publication in early 1989 and the time it was actually published in April. To enable BI to make comments on the paper to the MARC, the Department of Health, with the permission of the authors, had sent a copy of the report to BI with the understanding that the company would “do nothing to upset the normal process of publication.”

BI commissioned reviews of the study and convened a group including epidemiologists in New York to discuss the fenoterol study. Some of the reviewers’ criticisms were sent to the Lancet prior to publication. The review group expressed the opinion that “...other explanations for the data were more plausible than those reached by the authors... the study was found to have serious flaws in design, execution and analysis which rendered its results uninterpretable...the study provides no basis for either physicians or patients to alter their use of fenoterol.”

After accepting the paper based on suggestions from two reviewers for minor changes, the Lancet wrote to Crane and colleagues to state that the new criticisms were causing them “anxiety” and giving them “second thoughts.” Since the Lancet felt it could not ignore the criticisms, it offered the authors the option of withdrawing the paper, countering convincingly very critical comments, or accepting publication in the second half of the journal accompanied by a highly critical editorial. Disturbed that their acceptance might be withdrawn following submissions made by the company, the authors chose the option of seeking to counter the criticisms in a lengthy 12 page reply to the Lancet.

Their successful reply resulted in publication of the paper as the lead article in Lancet on April 29, 1989.

Clash Over Interpretation

The next chapter revolves around the attempts of the Department of Health to inform physicians about the significance of the Lancet report. It stated in a letter to physicians that “fenoterol will not be withdrawn from the market, but doctors should review and perhaps modify the treatment of severe asthmatics. The use of inhaled fenoterol rather than alternative medicines should be supported by cogent arguments.”

Anticipating the negative effects that publication of the Lancet article and the Department statement might have, the company had disagreed with the Department’s statements and warned that “...we strongly protest against this and highlight that the responsibility for legal and medical consequences will rest with you.” BI had wanted the Department to state that therapeutic conclusions could not be drawn from the Crane et al. study.

Apparently acting out of this concern, BI sent to physicians a copy of the statement by the review panel disagreeing with the Crane et al. conclusion and a company commentary “...to set this research in perspective to enable you to have the fullest details about this research programme and its interpretation...”

After the study was published, it was further criticized by BI and the ATF. The MARC indicated it would wait for the results from international debate before reviewing its stance further. The New Zealand Medical Association called for an independent review to resolve conflicting advice.

Second Study

The next set of developments revolve around a second report on fenoterol by the Wellington group. A major criticism of the first study was that drug data came from different sources for cases and controls. A new case control design was used to evaluate the same hypothesis with data from 1977 - 81 using the same source for drug information. A total of 57 cases and 227 controls were studied. The overall relative risk was 1.99 and reached 9.82 in a subgroup with the most severe asthma. The authors concluded that their second study added further support to the hypothesis that inhaled fenoterol increases the risk of death in patients with severe asthma.

Other Opinions

The results were presented at the second annual clinical epidemiology meeting in Newcastle, Australia in June 1989 and prominent epidemiologists were in attendance, including Paul Stolley from the US who had done previous work in this area. According to newspaper accounts, Dr. Stolley concluded that evidence against the drug was too strong not to act. He said there was only one important weakness in the design of the research reported in the Lancet and that had been cleared up in the new study. The Chairman of the United Kingdom’s Committee on Review of Medicines, David Lawson, was reported to have said after hearing the new data that if he were in New Zealand he would push to get fenoterol off the market “tomorrow or the day after,” according to the Dominion Sunday Times.

Replay

In an apparent replay of previous developments, the Department of Health sought to obtain a copy of the new study so that it could be reviewed by the MARC. The researchers refused unless a “rock-solid” agreement could be reached whereby the company would not receive a copy of the results prior to publication. Under the Official Information Act, the Department obtained the paper and passed it on to the company, according to the Christchurch Star.

The MARC met again in July 1989 and this time concurred that the study implied long term use of fenoterol was associated with a greater risk of death. However, the MARC advised the Department that no further action on fenoterol was required and suggested that animal studies be conducted to identify a potential mechanism to explain the deaths. According to the Christchurch Star, the researcher was to be a MARC member funded by BI.

Public Health Reactions

Reacting to this decision, a Public Health Association of New Zealand pharmaceutical task group said it was “...mystified by this statement since looking for a mechanism of death presupposes that the association is causal. Furthermore, when there is strong evidence of an association between fenoterol use and human death, it is a backward step to be doing animal studies before taking further action.” The Public Health Association wrote to the Minister of Health seeking “clarification of the pharmaceutical company’s role in the process of policy making over fenoterol” and recommended that all members of MARC should divulge to the Minister any associations with the pharmaceutical companies.

In July 1989, BI convened a second review group in Los Angeles to review the second study. According to a newspaper account, questions were raised by the director of the NZ Medical Research Council “...over the potential conflict inherent in the company’s hosting such a scientific review...,” and the Department of Health asked epidemiologist Marc Elwood to prepare a report for them to be furnished to the MARC. Apparently MARC has been composed primarily of clinicians and only recently added an epidemiologist to its roster.

Government Decision

In December 1989, the Minister of Health announced that the drug fenoterol would be restricted as of August l, l990. The delay is to enable physicians time to assess the need for fenoterol therapy in individual cases. The government decision was reached following a recommendation of the MARC which had received other reports from the company and from Marc Elwood. The latter’s report apparently carried weight and stated that “Although it still falls short of a totally acceptable standard of scientific certainty, the evidence is strong enough to support clinical and public decisions, and there do not appear to be strong counterbalancing arguments for the benefits of this particular drug.”

According to the wording of the government statement, the MARC agreed “that the balance of evidence was now in favor of a causal association between fenoterol use and asthma mortality.”

Issues Raised

Several issues are raised by the events that have transpired in New Zealand, many of which cannot be presented here. Those which seem of particular interest to epidemiologic researchers include the following:

The Journal: What limits, if any, should a journal set on the receipt and consideration of unsolicited reviews about articles being evaluated for publication? Is it permissible for journal editors to seek or consider reviews of papers commissioned by a company whose interests may be affected by the paper in question? The issue may be complicated even further if reviews are considered after a paper has been accepted for publication and the commissioned reviews are critical. The journal is placed in a difficult position because it may feel that it cannot prudently ignore the criticisms, yet they may not have been obtained during the normal process of peer review. What are the appropriate limits on “peer review?”

The Company: What limits, if any, should be set on a company’s efforts to defend its interests in a product when it believes the product is being wrongly implicated in adverse reactions or deaths? Clearly, a company has a right to argue against what it believes are weak data and an incorrect conclusion. It does not serve either the company’s or society’s interest to withdraw drugs prematurely. But what means has the company taken to reach its conclusion about the data? What question should the company be asking its consultants to answer (e.g., “Is there any chance the data are wrong?” “Is there any chance the data are right?” Or should the question be, “on balance, what conclusion is most likely true from the data?”

The Epidemiologists: What considerations should govern the formulation of opinions provided by epidemiologists working for hire? Are these considerations any different from those influencing the usual formulation of opinions about the extent to which a hypothesis has been proven? Must a critic consider both the strengths and weaknesses of the data, and both directions of potential biases in rendering an opinion? Epidemiologists are often defined as professional skeptics and consider this one of their more distinctive and useful attributes. What, if anything, is wrong with focusing on the reasons why some hypothesis has not been convincingly established? Does this not best serve the interest of science? Does it also best serve the interest of public health?

Department of Health and Advisory Groups: What safeguards should the government take to retain useful drugs while at the same time not exposing the public to unacceptable risks? Should a drug which becomes suspect for safety reasons be considered innocent until proven guilty or guilty until proven innocent? The normal safeguards for reaching correct conclusions about the causal nature of an association are to require repeat studies. However, when there are potentially serious public health consequences to further delay, and when epidemiologic data such as that from case control studies are not conclusive, decision makers and advisory groups may not have the luxury of awaiting further data. In that circumstance, what safeguards are appropriate? What considerations should be paramount?

Published March 1990  v

 

 
      ©  2011 The Epidemiology Monitor

Privacy  Terms of Use  |  Sitemap

Digital Smart Tools, LLC