Guest guest Posted April 26, 2002 Report Share Posted April 26, 2002 Thought this article would be of interest to those using antihistamines for flushing/urticaria: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn? pagename=article&node=&contentId=A3957-2002Mar22¬Found=true We're Not Gonna Take It Contrary to Ads' Message, Clarinex is Not Better Than Its Predecessor (C. Kelley - For The Washington Post) By M. Otto Special to The Washington Post Tuesday, March 26, 2002; Page HE01 You may have seen those strange new television ads for Clarinex, Schering-Plough's chip-off-the-old-blockbuster replacement for its non-sedating antihistamine pill, Claritin. Crowds mill on a grassy plain. Pan out as an enormous Clarinex pill hurtles through the heavens toward Earth, a meteor of relief. Cut to Clarinex particles capping histamine receptors in an animated blood vessel. A voice tells us the drug is the only allergy pill that delivers 24-hour relief from any allergy, anywhere, at any time. In the background we hear " We're Not Gonna Take It " and other snippets from " Tommy, " The Who's 1969 rock-opera about a deaf, dumb and blind boy who takes a lot of new drugs on his way toward salvation. Schering-Plough has launched the blitz (with related magazine and newspaper ads) to encourage Claritin users to switch to Clarinex before rival drug makers introduce generic versions of the drug or before Claritin goes over-the-counter, either of which may happen by year's end. The company has even made Clarinex cheaper than Claritin, to expedite the shift to the new drug. Claritin generated about $3.2 billion in sales worldwide for Schering-Plough last year, roughly one- third of the company's total for pharmaceuticals. The ads may have you thinking that Clarinex is more effective than Claritin. But doctors interviewed for this story say this is not the case. " I wouldn't recommend it. It is not any better than Claritin, " said Rudy Mueller, a family physician with 1,500 patients in his town, N.Y., practice. Mueller is author of " As Sick as It Gets, " a book about, among other topics, how drug makers influence medical practice. Mueller said there is no science to show that the new drug offers a real advantage over the old one. Jean Barbey, a physician who is interim director of the division of clinical pharmacology at town University Medical Center, agreed. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved Clarinex Dec. 21, based on studies that proved it worked better than a placebo against allergies. But the tests did not compare the drug head-to- head with Claritin. Without such studies, it's impossible to say whether allergy patients will do better on Clarinex, Barbey said. In Europe, where Clarinex has been on sale for months, the European Agency for the Evaluation of Medicinal Products (EMEA) tried to make up for that lack of direct comparison by studying trial results for the two drugs. After reviewing studies involving thousands of patients, EMEA, which clears drugs for sale in the European Union countries, concluded that dose per dose, Clarinex is " probably not superior " to Claritin. British National Health Service pharmacists reached a similar conclusion. " As the action, efficacy and side effects of [Clarinex] are similar to [Claritin], there is no reason to prefer it over products already available, " they said in a May 2001 report. Proven Better Than Nothing When asked if Clarinex is an improvement over Claritin, Schering- Plough spokesman Bill O'Donnell answered a different question. He noted that the new drug is the only pill approved to treat indoor allergies -- hence the ads' tag about countering allergies that arise " anywhere. " O'Donnell said Schering-Plough had thought about getting Claritin approved for indoor allergies, but figured the older drug did not have what it needed to win FDA approval for that use. Barbey, who at one time served as a consultant to Schering-Plough, is not impressed by the indoor allergy claim. " It doesn't mean a lot to me, " he said. " It's more a question of marketing strategy, " an attempt to show some advantage over Claritin. " They probably just tried harder " to get Clarinex approved for indoor use, he said. O'Donnell refused to speculate whether the purported indoor allergy advantage would hold up if Claritin and Clarinex were tested head-to- head for that use. Barbey said Clarinex does offer a theoretical advantage. Most drugs are composed of two molecules, mirror images of each other called stereoisomers, he explained. Schering-Plough isolated Claritin's biologically active isomer and repackaged it as a new drug. That's why patients who take 10 mg of Claritin can usually take 5 mg of Clarinex, the recommended daily dose. The new drug is more potent. That might be helpful for patients who found that Claritin didn't work well for them. But Claritin is converted to Clarinex in the body, which means that most patients get just as much active drug with the 10 mg dose of Claritin as they do with the 5 mg dose of Clarinex, Barbey said. So the potency advantage is questionable. " It's not a proven, practical advantage, " he said. " Will it translate to a clinical advantage? Probably not. " The Nexium Connection -Norton, director of pharmacy services at the Everett Clinic, a 185-physician group practice in Everett, Wash., suspects that Schering-Plough never tested Clarinex against Claritin because the company knew it could not demonstrate a clinically significant difference between the drugs. She thinks that bringing Clarinex to market was a " business decision " that " had nothing to do with clinical care. We have looked at the data and we see no difference between Claritin and Clarinex, so we are not adding it to our formulary, " she said. " We are educating our doctors that Clarinex offers no benefits. " Schering-Plough declined to comment on its business decisions regarding the product. -Norton says she is worried about the effect of the Clarinex ads on her clinic's patients. " As soon as ads hit, patients start asking for the drug, " convinced that new means better, she said. It reminds -Norton of another " new and improved " drug that came out about a year ago and is now advertised constantly on TV -- Nexium. Nexium is AstraZeneca's replacement for its legendarily lucrative heartburn pill, Prilosec. In 2000, Prilosec was the best-selling drug in the nation, with sales topping $4 billion. AstraZeneca is now battling in court to keep generic versions off the market -- and battling in the market to drive consumers to Nexium. In Nexium ads, hopeful baby boomers stand on a rocky outcrop at ocean's edge or in the desert looking to hear the good news about the " new purple pill. " Nexium obligingly rains down from the heavens. " I just had a patient come in who has been on Prilosec for years and has been stable. His first question to me was, 'Should I be on Nexium?' " said Mueller shortly after the ads started in June. " Of course not. But try to tell that to a patient who just saw the TV ad. It is pretty frustrating trying to reeducate patients after they see these commercials. " Nexium is based on the same principle as Clarinex. It is an isomer of Prilosec, repackaged as a new drug. Mueller and -Norton are skeptical of Nexium because they have read the drug's label. In two FDA-reviewed studies, Nexium worked consistently better than Prilosec only when it was used in a higher dose. In a third study, however, a higher dose of Nexium did not work any better than a lower dose of Prilosec. When the same amounts of drug were used in a fourth study, there was no difference between them. The studies looked at how quickly the drugs healed erosive esophagitis, a potentially serious condition in which stomach acid eats away at the lining of the esophagus, and how well the drugs prevented heartburn once esophagitis was healed. The label notes that in three European trials for gastro-esophageal reflux disease (GERD), which is a far more common cause of heartburn, Nexium offered no significant advantage over Prilosec even when used in higher doses. One FDA reviewer concluded that although AstraZeneca proved Nexium worked, it failed to demonstrate that it worked better than Prilosec. Another suggested that patients who took equal amounts of either drug would probably get the same results. AstraZeneca spokesman Jim Coyne said there have been no additional studies comparing Prilosec directly with Nexium. Shortly after the Nexium ads hit, Doug Levine, a physician who is chief medical officer of AstraZeneca's gastrointestinal therapeutic area, explained that in the Nexium trials, Prilosec had, by chance, worked better than it normally does. He also mentioned company- generated data that showed Nexium suppresses acid better than Prilosec. Patients taking Nexium therefore might not need over-the- counter acid suppressors as much when they are on the drug, he said. But -Norton has studied her clinic's patients and has not seen any difference when they switch to Nexium. They need to use OTC heartburn remedies and visit the doctor's office just as often, she said. Still, with the massive advertising push, AstraZeneca managed to capture about 17 percent of new " proton pump inhibitor " heartburn pill prescriptions in 2001, making it the most successful launch ever in that class of drugs, according to the company's annual report, which also noted that Prilosec has lost users to Nexium. With so many patients already taking the new drug, the company will be in good shape to retain its users when cheaper generic equivalents to Prilosec hits the market in coming months. When discussing Nexium, Levine said that patients who are doing fine on Prilosec, or any other drug, should generally not, as a matter of good clinical practice, switch to another medication to treat their condition. The Emperor's New Pills Schering-Plough seems to be following the Nexium strategy, according to pharmacist Lee Vermeulen, University of Wisconsin clinical associate professor of pharmacy and director of the University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics' Center for Drug Policy. As AstraZeneca did with Nexium, Schering-Plough is offering free trials of Clarinex, selling it at a discount compared with its predecessor and flooding the airwaves with ads. Clarinex commercials even employ the same subtly biblical, vaguely unsettling drugs-from- heaven imagery as the Nexium ads. O'Donnell said his company is " pleased with the launch, " but would not comment on the number of Clarinex converts Schering-Plough has won since the ad campaign started on March 4. He declined to discuss the company's marketing strategy. Vermeulen helps set drug policy for his university's 85,000-member health plan. That means he spends a lot of his time comparing pharmaceuticals. Drugs like Nexium and Clarinex get under his skin. Both are perfect examples of what he calls the " stereoisomer strategy. " " The isomer is developed simply to extend the patent life of the drug, " Vermeulen said. " The company then tries like crazy to find something to differentiate the new agent from the parent, but the clinical advantage is simply not there. No self-respecting physician will be swayed by the propaganda that these companies are passing off as relevant science. " Because of that, companies turn to direct-to-consumer ads to whip up consumer demand, he said. Consumers with no medical background make easy targets and are quite willing to make the switch, at least as a trial. " Once the patient has switched, it is very difficult to get them to switch back to the generic version of the older product they were very happy with in the past, " Vermeulen said, even if the new drug doesn't work any better. He says he would like to see the FDA refuse to approve drugs unless drug companies show a clear benefit over products already on the market. He says that could happen if the federal government gets into the drug-buying business. " I'd be surprised if we didn't see reform of this sort as the Medicare prescription benefit becomes a reality, " he said. " We can't afford this kind of nonsense from the industry. " Bargain Pricing Barbey agreed with AstraZeneca's Levine that it's generally a bad idea for patients who are doing well on one drug to switch to another. But given the similarity between Claritin and Clarinex, it would be " perfectly reasonable, " Barbey said, to switch to Clarinex to save a few dollars. Schering-Plough is selling the drug at about a 17 percent discount to Claritin, which makes it a bargain for the 50 percent or so of allergy patients who find Claritin helpful. A CVS in the District sells a 30-day supply of Clarinex for $79.59. A month's worth of Claritin goes for $95.99. When Claritin goes over-the-counter or becomes available generically by its chemical name, loratadine, Barbey said, it would probably be best to compare the new forms with Clarinex and choose the drug you can get least expensively, balancing your insurance co-payment with your out-of-pocket expenses. -Norton noted that patients should try nasal steroid sprays, like Schering-Plough's own Nasonex, before turning to non-sedating antihistamines. Numerous studies have shown they work better, have few side effects and generally cost less. But only about 25 percent of patients give steroid sprays a try before they are prescribed an antihistamine. This has something to do with the fact that nasal sprays bother some people, -Norton said, but she suspects that slick advertising has something to do with it, too. M. Otto is a physician assistant and medical reporter who covers health law and medical research for BNA in Washington. © 2002 The Washington Post Company Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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