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FDA Gives Approval For Off Label Use Of Meds.

Posted by Phillipa on January 14, 2009, at 12:50:06

Thought this was interesting Now it's okay. Phillipa

U.S. Lets Drugmakers Advise Doctors on Unapproved Uses


By Lisa Richwine

WASHINGTON (Reuters) Jan 12 - U.S. officials finalized controversial guidelines that will allow pharmaceutical companies and medical device makers to tell doctors about unapproved uses of their products.

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) will permit manufacturers such as Pfizer Inc and Merck & Co to distribute copies of medical journal articles that describe unapproved uses. The practice could help companies expand the markets for medicines and medical devices.

The move, announced a week before Republican President George W. Bush leaves office, enacts a policy that drew objections from congressional Democrats and drug-industry critics when it was proposed last year. Opponents say it will allow promotion of uses without adequate testing.

By law, manufacturers are prohibited from marketing their medicines for uses not approved by the FDA. But doctors can prescribe drugs for any use they see fit, a practice known as "off-label" use.

Distribution of medical literature suggesting a drug may have merit for an unapproved use is a marketing area that has been in dispute for years.

The FDA said "public health can be served when health-care professionals receive truthful and non-misleading scientific and medical information on unapproved uses."

Industry critics say allowing companies to distribute the information will promote untested uses of drugs and may be dangerous for patients. It also could deter manufacturers from conducting additional tests of the new uses and subjecting them to FDA scrutiny for possible approval.

Off-label use is common in medicine. A doctor may prescribe an antidepressant, for example, to treat insomnia, or a cancer drug for a type of cancer beyond what is approved.

About one of five prescriptions in the United States was written to treat a condition for which the drug was not approved, according to a 2006 study published in the Archives of Internal Medicine. The researchers said most off-label use occurs without scientific support.

Drugmakers welcomed the new FDA guidelines. Providing the studies to doctors will help "assure that medical professionals receive timely and accurate medical information prior to the lengthy process" of securing FDA approval for wider use, said Ken Johnson, a spokesman for the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America.

Off-label use "can save lives, especially in practice areas where there are few effective treatments," he added.

The FDA said articles circulated by companies should come from peer-reviewed journals that require disclosure of conflicts of interest for researchers. The agency also said it encouraged companies to seek FDA approval for unapproved uses.

(Reporting by Lisa Richwine; editing by Derek Caney and Brian Moss)

 

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poster:Phillipa thread:873949
URL: http://www.dr-bob.org/babble/20090104/msgs/873949.html