Showing posts with label Epogen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Epogen. Show all posts

Friday, May 25, 2012

Amgen’s incomplete report on an early major trial of epoetin misled the medical community about the anemia drug’s risks and benefits

stock.xchng, gerard79

*EPOGEN® (epoetin alfa)

News & Opinion

Opinion: Misleading Drug Trials

Amgen’s incomplete report on an early major trial of epoetin misled the medical community about the anemia drug’s risks and benefits—and helped make Amgen rich.

By Daniel W. Coyne | May 14, 2012

The Normal Hematocrit Trial, conducted in the mid-1990s, was the largest study ever to compare the use of epoetin, a drug that stimulates blood production, to treat dialysis patients, who suffer from anemia, or a below-normal red blood cell count, called hematocrit. In healthy individuals, 39 to 45 percent of their blood is comprised of red blood cells. Severe anemia, a hematocrit below 25 percent, can stress heart function, cause marked fatigue, and require blood transfusions.

Most dialysis patients need some epoetin or a similar drug to avoid severe anemia, and the higher the desired hematocrit, the higher the dose required. The study aimed to compare the effects of standard epoetin doses, which maintain patients’ hematocrit around 30 percent, and much higher doses, to raise hematocrit to normal (42 percent). The trial was stopped early in May 1996, just 29 months after it began, because of a trend toward increased deaths and heart attacks in the patients given the higher doses of epoetin. This was the first outcomes trial to show epoetin might be harmful. An editorial accompanying the August 1998 publication of the study in the New England Journal of Medicine, described how, “disappointingly,” there was a trend toward more deaths in the higher dosage group, but argued that the study still supported the recommendations of the National Kidney Foundation’s guidelines, published in the year before, that sufficient epoetin be used to maintain hematocrit between 33 and 36 percent—the upper half of the US Food and Drug Administration’s recommendation at that time—to reduce transfusions, improve quality of life, and possibly reduce deaths.

In March 2012, 14 years later, I published my own analysis of the trial based on Amgen’s clinical trial report, which I obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request. The results were dramatically different.

In 1998, although the risk of death and heart attack was significantly greater among patients receiving the higher doses of epoetin, the NEJM editors reportedly accepted Amgen’s position that the statistics should be adjusted because the company and the trials’ leaders terminated the trial early based on the recommendation of the data safety monitoring board. Therefore the trial results were reported as showing only a trend toward—and not solid evidence for—increased harm. The 1998 paper did not report the unadjusted statistics, or state that the statistical rules employed required the p value to reach 0.00088 to be considered significant, a much high bar than the traditional 0.05. This was also not appreciated by most experts.

According to the 1998 NEJM publication, the only definitive risk from higher epoetin doses was an increased risk of clotting the fistula from which blood is taken to perform hemodialysis, a common and less severe problem. And the higher dose group benefited by receiving fewer transfusions and enjoying higher measures of the “physical function” component of quality of life.

Thus, while the 1998 NEJM publication discouraged high epoetin doses to target hematocrit to 42 percent because of a trend toward increased risks, it also identified clear benefits of exceeding a hematocrit target of 30 percent—fewer transfusions and better quality of life. Epoetin use had already started to increase following the release of National Kidney Foundation’s 1997 KDOQI anemia guidelines, which incidentally, were funded by Amgen. After the NEJM paper was published, epoetin use in dialysis patients exploded, becoming a $2.5 billion a year market in the US alone.

By 2006, new KDOQI guidelines, again supported by Amgen, recommended all dialysis and kidney disease patients should receive doses of epoetin to maintain a hematocrit of 33 to 39 percent based on quality of life improvements—citing as evidence the Normal Hematocrit Trial and some smaller trials.

The results of my own analysis, on the other hand, published this March in Kidney International, showed that the quality of life scores had not improved in the higher dosing arm. The results I found in the Amgen report, filed with the FDA in 1996, showed that bigger epoetin doses to target higher hematocrit did not improve the physical function quality of life component at all, and had significantly increased the risk of death, heart attack, other thrombotic events, and hospitalizations.

The only benefit from higher epoetin doses was reduced transfusions, though the benefit was minor: one needed to treat 10 patients for 14 months at an additional epoetin cost of about $200,000 to avoid one person being transfused. Increased hospitalizations would further increase the total cost of higher epoetin doses.

The strikingly different results were because the 1998 NEJM publication had replaced the predefined outcomes and analyses with statistical adjustments and post hoc assessments, including replacing the total lack of effect of higher doses on physical function scores with the observation that patients with higher physical function scores had higher hematocrit, presumably because healthier patients respond better to epoetin. The wording was sufficiently unclear that even the KDOQI anemia guidelines misread the quality of life results as indicating that higher doses of epoetin to target higher hematocrit had caused an improvement in quality of life, when in fact, the trial results showed no improvement.

The academic authors of the 1998 publication state there was no intent to mislead, claiming the NEJM editors removed from drafts all the adverse results that I reported in 2012. They also state the 1998 publication clearly discouraged targeting hematocrit to 42 percent. What the 1998 publication did not do, however, was make clear, as my report does, that higher epoetin doses carry great risks, while the only benefit was a meager reduction in transfusion risk at great monetary cost.

Of course, even if there was no intentional deception, the effect was to force experts to say targeting hematocrit to about 42 percent using higher epoetin doses improved quality of life and reduced transfusions, and prevented them from saying such management significantly increased deaths, cardiac events, thrombotic events, and hospitalizations. Amgen controlled the debate, and by 2012 had made $37 billion from epoetin sales in the United States alone.

And if the intent was not to mislead, why not just publish subsequent articles clarifying the results, especially the quality of life results? The anemia workgroups that developed the KDOQI guidelines included one of the 1998 NEJM authors. Why not notify the KDOQI organization and other workgroup members that they were misreading the 1998 NEJM results? I cannot imagine what Amgen would have done if they had intended to mislead.

I waited 1,260 days to receive the trial report from the FDA. Two weeks before receiving the report, on June 24, 2011, the FDA released a safety warning and new label advice for use of epoetin in chronic kidney disease. It withdrew the previous recommended dose and hematocrit target of 30-36 percent. The new label states that there is no known safe dose of epoetin, no proven safe hematocrit target, and when using epoetin in dialysis patients, decrease or stop the epoetin when hematocrit exceeds 33 percent. The label now reports the Normal Hematocrit Trial’s hazard ratio and confidence intervals for death and heart attack and all-cause death as significantly higher in the higher hematocrit arm, just as I reported them earlier this year.

Finally, as strange as it seems, I am now the sole author of the publication on the predefined primary and secondary results of the largest outcomes trial of epoetin in dialysis patients, and I didn’t even participate in the trial. Perhaps the FDA will make the epoetin label cite my paper.

Daniel Coyne is a Professor of Medicine at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, Missouri.

http://the-scientist.com/2012/05/14/opinion-misleading-drug-trials/

Monday, August 8, 2011

Epogen-Inappropriate use of blood cell booster widespread

(Reuters Health) - Costly drugs that boost red blood cells are being routinely misused in cancer patients, raising concerns about side effects and wasted resources, researchers say.

A quarter of the time, they found patients got the so-called erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESAs) for no more than a week, which is too short to do much good.

"These are very expensive drugs and there are a fair number of side effects," said Dr. Jason Wright of Columbia University Medical Center in New York, whose findings were published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.

According to recent estimates, Medicare spends more than $1 billion dollars annually on ESAs, which include brand-name products such as Amgen's Epogen and Roche's NeoRecormon.

The medications are approved for cancer patients who are getting chemotherapy, and the recommended treatment is between two and 14 weeks.

Outside of that, the benefits are murky and could be outweighed by side effects. Those include blood clots and heart problems, and in some cases the drugs might even fuel tumor growth.

"Over the last five years, we have been seeing many side effects that weren't seen in the early clinical trials," Wright explained, adding that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued their strongest warning about ESAs in 2007.

Many other drugs have turned out to hold nasty surprises, not least when doctors prescribe them outside of their approved indication -- so-called off-label use.

On Wednesday, for instance, one research team found an antipsychotic given to tens of thousands of U.S. veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder has no benefit, but causes weight gain and sleepiness.

Wright's team used data on 21,000 Medicare beneficiaries with common cancers who'd been given an ESA, such as Amgen's Epogen, between 1995 and 2005.

As it turned out, 24 percent of the patients got the drugs for a week or less.

"You're subjecting patients to potential toxicity for very little clinical benefit, so it is wasted resources," Wright told Reuters Health.

What's more, eight percent of the Medicare beneficiaries received the medicine for more than 14 weeks, while 14 percent were getting the drugs when they weren't on chemotherapy.

"What we are concerned about is that physicians don't always realize the correct way to prescribe these drugs," Wright said.

It's hard to know exactly how to explain the results. Doctors might be stopping the medicines early because their patients don't tolerate them well.

But when it comes to off-label and prolonged use, there is another, more worrisome possibility. Indeed, previous research shows doctors prescribe more ESAs when they are working in a fee-for-service system. Wright's team also found private practice doctors were more likely to prescribe the drugs for prolonged periods than others, while they were less likely to use them for less than a week.

"Patients need to be aware of the drug that their doctors are giving them," said Wright.

Dr. Thomas J. George, who was not involved in the study, said the enthusiasm for ESAs has dampened somewhat after the side effects surfaced.

"The really important question now is whether it is still being used routinely, because that would be a real public health concern," said George, a cancer researcher at the University of Florida.

In the meantime, he told Reuters Health, "there needs to be a fairly rigorous educational program that accompanies the use of these medications so doctors know who is going to benefit."

SOURCE:bit.ly/n458JY Journal of Clinical Oncology, online August 1, 2011.

Saturday, October 16, 2010

FDA may have new restrictions on Procrit, Aranesp and Epogen

Procrit, Aranesp and Epogen
An article released by the associated press yesterday reported the FDA may have new restrictions on Procrit, Aranesp and Epogen. These drugs appear to double the risk for stroke in patients with kidney disease.
.
On Thursday the FDA posted a safety review on these medications from Amgen Inc. The restrictions are focusing on the use in patients with chronic kidney disease who are not yet receiving dialysis.
l
Quoted from the article
;b
"The medicines — Procrit, Aranesp and Epogen — are multibillion dollar sellers because of their ability to boost oxygen-carrying red blood cells, reducing the need for painful blood transfusions. But sales have fallen sharply since 2007, when the FDA added the first of several safety warnings to the drugs, based on evidence they can cause tumor growth and hasten death in cancer patients. The drugs are no longer used in patients with several types of cancers".
n
Next Monday the FDA will consult with an outside panel of experts and go over the data asking for their recommendations on warning labels, additional studies or lower doses of the drugs.
m
In the treatment of Hepatitis C Procrit and Epogen are often used as rescue drugs, on the Procrit website they have this warning which was revised in 2009:
m
Cases of pure red cell aplasia (PRCA) and of severe anemia, with or without other cytopenias, associated with neutralizing antibodies to erythropoietin have been reported in patients with chronic renal failure receiving PROCRIT® by subcutaneous administration. PRCA has also been reported in patients receiving ESAs while undergoing treatment for hepatitis C with interferon and ribavirin. If any patient develops a sudden loss of response to PROCRIT®, accompanied by severe anemia and low reticulocyte count, and anti-erythropoietin antibody-associated anemia is suspected, withhold PROCRIT® and other erythropoietic proteins.
Contact Centocor Ortho Biotech (1-800-457-6399) to perform assays for binding and neutralizing antibodies. If erythropoietin antibody-mediated anemia is confirmed, PROCRIT® should be permanently discontinued and patients should not be switched to other erythropoietic proteins
k
From September 30th Also See :
k
k

Thursday, September 30, 2010

Recall/Anemia drugs Procrit and Epogen

Amgen, J&J anemia drugs recalled over glass flakes

By Deena Beasley

LOS ANGELES Fri Sep 24, 2010 2:09pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Amgen Inc is recalling several hundred lots of anemia drugs Epogen and Procrit, sold by Johnson & Johnson, because vials of the injectable medicines might develop tiny glass flakes that could cause blood clots and other serious health problems.

Amgen, which sells Epogen, manufactures the identical drugs at a plant in Puerto Rico.

Amgen spokeswoman Emma Hurley said the recall, which included 200 lots of Epogen, is not expected to disrupt availability of the drug and the biotechnology company does not expect a material financial impact.

J&J spokeswoman Lisa Vaga said 155 lots of Procrit were recalled, but declined to comment on any financial impact to the company.

Amgen said there have been no patient complaints that can be directly attributed to the presence of glass. It said the lots were being voluntarily recalled as a precaution.

The glass flakes result from the interaction of the drug with glass vials over the shelf life of the product, the company said.

Hurley said expiration dates for the drugs have been reduced to 12 months for single-dose vials and 15 months for multi-dose vials. Their shelf life had been 36 months.

She also said the company would switch vial manufacturers.

"From an investor standpoint, I don't think there's any real impact at all," said Cowen & Co analyst Eric Schmidt. "There's no patient safety issue, no one's been harmed here. There's no supply issue. There will be plenty of supply to go around."

Amgen sells Epogen in the United States, where it is used mostly for kidney dialysis patients. Under a long-standing license from Amgen, J&J's Centocor Ortho Biotech unit distributes Procrit in the United States, mainly for cancer and HIV patients. J&J has been dealing with a rash of recalls of its consumer medicines.

Biotechnology company Genzyme Corp has had its reputation damaged by product shortages caused by manufacturing quality control issues.

Since the Amgen recall relates to materials rather than production processes, the impact on the company will be much more limited, said Bernstein & Co analyst Geoffrey Porges.

Amgen said the recall is being conducted in cooperation with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

Amgen's 2009 sales of Epogen totaled $2.6 billion, while J&J's Procrit sales were $2.2 billion over the same period.

Both medicines are engineered antibodies that work by stimulating production of red blood cells.
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE68N2WB20100924