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To: celeryroot.com who wrote (18378)3/31/1998 11:54:00 PM
From: WTDEC  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 32384
 
"hours" Minutes?



To: celeryroot.com who wrote (18378)4/1/1998 7:45:00 AM
From: Henry Niman  Respond to of 32384
 
Speaking of research, here's what WSJ had to say about the new AHP study on Redux:
The Wall Street Journal Interactive Edition -- April 1, 1998
Study Says Diet Pill Redux
Is Less Dangerous Than Believed

By ROBERT LANGRETH and LAURA JOHANNES
Staff Reporters of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Six months after American Home Products Corp. recalled Redux over
safety concerns, the company is releasing new data suggesting the diet pill
is far less dangerous than previously thought.

Last September, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration shocked doctors
and diet-drug patients by reporting that about 30% of people using Redux,
or a combination of diet pills called "fen-phen," suffered damage to their
heart valves -- a rate significantly higher than the 2% to 6% of heart-valve
problems found in the general population. American Home quickly pulled
Redux off the market, upsetting many overweight people successfully using
the drug. The recall led to numerous lawsuits against American Home,
caused many worried users to have their hearts examined and fueled
debates questioning the FDA data as well as the medical community's
aggressive use of the diet pills.

The new study of 1,072 people is the first of
several sponsored by American Home in an
effort to exonerate its pills, which include both
Redux and a chemical cousin called Pondimin
that was also recalled. Performed by
cardiologists at Georgetown University in
Washington, D.C., the new research found
6.5% to 7.3% of 676 patients who had taken
one of two forms of Redux had heart-valve
problems, compared with 4.5% of patients
who had taken a dummy pill. The study only
looked at short-term use of the drug.

Results 'Reassuring'

The researchers, who delivered the new data late Tuesday at a meeting of
the American College of Cardiology in Atlanta, said the difference
between Redux users and the control group is "not statistically significant."
Neil Weissman, a Georgetown cardiologist who led the study, described
the difference as "small," noting that while the results are "reassuring" to
Redux users, further studies will be needed to assess the danger to people
who took Redux longer or with other diet medicines.

Some diet-pill doctors urged caution interpreting the new results. "I don't
think any single study is going to be definitive," said Richard Atkinson, a
researcher at the University of Wisconsin, who said a third of his diet-drug
patients developed heart-valve leaks. "We don't know what's going on
here. It's very mysterious," he said.

American Home officials said that even if its studies exonerate Redux, it
would never seek to market the drug again because of the liability
situation. But the substantial difference between the FDA survey and the
new Georgetown results should provide a boost to American Home in
fighting its lawsuits.

Shares Jump

Wall Street seemed to expect the good news. American Home's shares
surged on the New York Stock Exchange on Monday and closed
Tuesday in composite trading at $95.375, up $3.625. In addition, shares
of Interneuron Pharmaceuticals Inc., a small Lexington, Mass., company
that licensed the drug to American Home, jumped $2.0625, or 25%, to
$10.4375 in composite trading on the Nasdaq Stock Market.

American Home's legal opponents were unimpressed by the new study.
"This isn't science, it's American Home buying a legal defense," said John
Cummings III, a lawyer at Cummings, Cummings, Dudenhefer & Martin
who is helping to coordinate diet-drug lawsuits. "All of these studies
sponsored by American Home are suspect."

The study didn't include any patients on fen-phen, the popular diet-drug
combo used by millions of Americans in recent years. Fenfluramine, a
chemical cousin of Redux, was also marketed by American Home as
Pondimin, while phentermine is marketed by several companies. Only
Redux and Pondimin were recalled. The FDA never approved the use of
fenfluramine with phentermine.

Moreover, patients in the new study were on Redux about 2.5 months, far
shorter than the six to 12 months of use among many patients in last year's
FDA survey.

"That's a very short period of time considering that the drug was marketed
for longer-term use" of up to a year, said Michael Myers, an obesity
specialist in Los Alamitos, Calif., who has opposed use of Redux. "I hope
the results are true, but you can't form a conclusion from such limited
data."

Valid Study?

The FDA, which reviewed the study, said the new data are good news for
patients who took Redux for three months or less. But the agency pointed
out that the results don't apply to the large numbers of people who took it
longer. American Home said the new study is valid because its market
data suggest that 86% of Redux users stayed on the drug for 90 days or
less.

Mehmood Khan, chief of endocrinology at Hennepin County Medical
Center in Minneapolis, said he still stands by his preliminary findings,
released last fall, that about 25% of patients taking appetite-suppressant
drugs developed valve leaks, compared with only 1% in a placebo group.

Nevertheless, some obese patients feel the medications should be back on
the market. Randy Voss, a 46-year-old livestock farmer from LaValle,
Wis., said he took fen-phen for a year without side effects, allowing him
for the first time in his adult life to maintain a normal weight and control his
severe diabetes problem. He has gained 25 pounds since the drugs were
recalled.

Morton Maxwell, a Los Angeles diet doctor, said the drugs should be
marketed again for some patients because even if they cause some valve
problems, their benefit to severely overweight people outweighs their risks.

The American Home study was actually begun before the recall to
determine the weight-loss effects of a new long-acting form of Redux.
Patients either received the long-acting Redux, normal Redux or a dummy
pill. The study was stopped when the drug was recalled. But following the
recall, patients had echocardiograms, or heart ultrasounds, performed on
them to see if they had any heart problems. The study was blinded,
meaning that neither the patients nor the doctors performing or reading the
echocardiograms knew who had received Redux and who had received a
dummy pill.

The potential side effects of the diet drugs surfaced last summer when
researchers from the Mayo Clinic published results in the New England
Journal of Medicine showing that 24 previously healthy woman developed
rare heart-valve lesions within a year after they started taking fen-phen;
five required surgery. American Home at the time said the results were
inconclusive and only applied to Pondimin, not Redux. Nevertheless, sales
of both drugs began to drop precipitously.

Just weeks before the recall, American Home officials still argued the diet
drugs were as safe as other prescription medications on the market. But in
early September, the FDA informed American Home that a survey of five
clinicians had found that nearly one-third of 291 fen-phen and Redux
patients had heart problems, and asked it to withdraw the drugs. Faced
with the new evidence, American Home recalled the drugs on Sept. 15, at
a cost of over $100 million.

The original FDA findings, while alarming, weren't considered definitive
because they didn't result from a controlled study but from a survey in
which several doctors specifically looked for heart problems among
diet-drug users. The new study, despite its limitations, has the benefit of
being blinded and controlled, suggesting it may be more reliable.



To: celeryroot.com who wrote (18378)4/1/1998 9:45:00 AM
From: dwc  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 32384
 
This is a whole new slant to the "Weekend at Bernie's"



To: celeryroot.com who wrote (18378)4/1/1998 1:11:00 PM
From: Henry Niman  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 32384
 
CNBC just announced that GLX was up 3 on guess what? Merger Talks! With AHP again!