J&J Study Suggests Risperdal Is Better Than Lilly's Zyprexa
Bloomberg News November 2, 1998, 9:40 a.m. ET
J&J Study Suggests Risperdal Is Better Than Lilly's Zyprexa
Paris, Nov. 2 (Bloomberg) -- Johnson & Johnson released a study showing that patients using its psychosis treatment Risperdal improved their conditions with fewer side-effects than those on Eli Lilly & Co.'s Zyprexa, a fast-growing rival drug threatening to supplant Risperdal as the leading antipsychotic.
The study, released at the 11th European Congress on Neuropsychopharmacology, showed that patients taking Risperdal had ''significantly'' greater reductions in some symptoms of schizophrenia than those taking Zyprexa. Patients on Risperdal also gained less weight, the study's authors said.
Johnson & Johnson and Eli Lilly are competing for first place in a new market for so-called ''atypical'' antipsychotics, newer drugs that doctors say are a major improvement over older drugs like haloperidol, a generic drug still widely used to treat schizophrenia and other mental illnesses. The latest analysis is the second head-to-head study of the two drugs, with the first -- sponsored by Eli Lilly -- suggesting Zyprexa is superior.
''If it doesn't work, physicians won't prescribe it,'' said Baron Shopsin, former chief of New York University's affective disorders unit and now a medical consultant to the drug industry. ''If Zyprexa is growing, it's because patients are getting better.''
Shopsin said Zyprexa appears to have a ''cleaner profile with fewer side-effects,'' and that ''patients get well faster.''
New Prescriptions
Zyprexa was first launched in 1996, almost three years after Risperdal, but the number of new prescriptions for Zyprexa grew by 104 percent in the year to August, to 2 million, according to IMS Health, a market consultancy.
Zyprexa now has 17 percent of the U.S. market for antipsychotics, IMS said. Risperdal had 21 percent of the U.S. market in the year to August, IMS said, with prescriptions growing 18 percent to 2.7 million.
The latest study started with 407 U.S. patients, of which about half were prescribed one drug or the other. It was a double- blind study, meaning neither the doctor nor the patient knew which patient took which drug, and lasted eight weeks. More results of the continuing study are to be presented next year.
The study found that while both drugs were effective, patients who completed the study using Risperdal showed a 20 percent ''greater improvement'' in treating so-called positive symptoms of schizophrenia, such as hallucinations and delusions. Patients on Risperdal also showed 10 percent less incidence of so- called negative symptoms, such as anxiety and depression, according to Martin Brecher, director of medical affairs for central nervous system drugs for Janssen Pharmaceutica, a Johnson & Johnson subsidiary.
''We showed there was the suggestion of increased efficacy of Risperdal compared to olanzapine (the chemical name for Zyprexa),'' said Brecher.
Brecher said the study was conducted to counter the previous study conducted by Pierre Tran, a senior researcher with Eli Lilly, which showed that patients taking Risperdal had more schizophrenic symptoms than those on Zyprexa.
Charge of Bias
Brecher also charged that the Tran study was ''biased by design,'' since it used higher doses of Risperdal than are used in standard clinical practice, which he said caused more side- effects like uncontrolled tremors and muscle stiffness not seen at lower doses.
The results of the Tran study ''are not surprising, since they overdosed the patient,'' said Brecher.
Tran, who also attended the conference, dismissed Brecher's criticism over dosages in his trial, which was published last year in a scientific journal.
''The question of what is the best dose to take has been the object of debate in the scientific community,'' said Tran. He said no patients were forced to used higher doses of any drug. He said he could not comment further on the Johnson & Johnson study, since he hadn't seen details.
In the Johnson & Johnson study, patients taking Zyprexa gained an average of a pound in weight a week, about half as much as those taking Risperdal. Robert Conley, a psychiatrist with the University of Maryland who conducted the Johnson & Johnson trial, said weight gain is a serious issue for patients taking antipsychotics, because it makes some patients uncompliant with the treatment regime.
Weight Gain
''We are having people stop their medication because of weight gain,'' said Conley.
Tran said the weight gain findings were ''not a surprise,'' since his study also showed patients taking Zyprexa tended to gain more weight.
The competition between Johnson & Johnson and Eli Lilly comes as other companies face setbacks in the development of their own atypical antipsychotics.
In June, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration rejected Pfizer Inc.'s new schizophrenia drug Zeldox, chemically called ziprasidone, over worries that it causes cardiovascular problems. Pfizer said it plans to submit more information to the agency.
Similar problems faced Serlect/Serdolect, made by Lundbeck, a Danish drugmaker, and licensed to Abbott Laboratories in the U.S., according to Conley.
--Dane Hamilton in Paris through the London newsroom (44-171) 330- |