Since I started this blog way back in March of 2010, I have posted several times about big Pharma companies being fined for the off-label marketing of various psychiatric medications. Well, the hits just keep on coming.
The Consumerist was
one of several news sources to recently report that:
"New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman announced the
settlement Thursday resolving allegations that Bristol-Myers Squibb improperly
marketed and promoted the drug Abilify.
Abilify — the brand name for the prescription
drug aripiprazole – is a second-generation antipsychotic prescription
drug, commonly, commonly referred to as “atypical antipsychotics,” that were
originally used to treat schizophrenia.
According to the states’ complaint, which was
also filed today, BMS engaged in off-label marketing, which is the promotion of
drugs for uses that are not FDA-approved.
For example, the complaint claims that BMS
improperly promoted Ability for pediatric use and for use in elderly patients
with symptoms consistent with dementia and Alzheimer’s disease.
This, despite the fact that in 2006, Abilify
received a “black box” warning stating that elderly patients with
dementia-related psychosis who are treated with antipsychotic drugs have an
increased risk of death.
Additionally, the complaint alleges that BMS
violated state consumer protection laws by misrepresenting and minimizing the
risks of the drug including metabolic and weight gain side effects and by
misrepresenting the findings of scientific studies.
Under the proposed agreement, BMS is
prohibited from promoting Ability from off-label uses; making false or
misleading claims about the drug; compensating health care providers for
attended promotional activities; using grant funds to promote Ability; and
providing samples of the medication to health care providers who do not intend
to use it for labeled purposes."
Bristol-Myers Squibb settled the claims with 43 states for a total of 19.5 million dollars. That sounds like a lot of money, but for big drug companies, it is actually a paltry sum. Fines like that are considered a cost of doing business
As readers know, I am rabidly against the use of antipsychotic medications in non-psychotic children, which is unfortunately becoming more and more common. However, I must admit I have negative feelings about that black box warning regarding the use of any (not just Abilify) antipsychotic medication in patients in nursing homes with advanced dementia due to Alzheimer's disease or other severe brain conditions.
Things have gotten to the point where docs are afraid to prescribe these medications even in such patients who are actively psychotic with hallucinations and/or paranoid delusions, for which there are no other effective treatments.
As readers know, I am rabidly against the use of antipsychotic medications in non-psychotic children, which is unfortunately becoming more and more common. However, I must admit I have negative feelings about that black box warning regarding the use of any (not just Abilify) antipsychotic medication in patients in nursing homes with advanced dementia due to Alzheimer's disease or other severe brain conditions.
Things have gotten to the point where docs are afraid to prescribe these medications even in such patients who are actively psychotic with hallucinations and/or paranoid delusions, for which there are no other effective treatments.
Even in non-psychotic demented patients, antipsychotic meds are often the
best agents for controlling assaultive behavior in this population. Unlike other sedatives, they do so while only minimally exacerbating memory and cognitive deficits in these people. Our society seems to want to pay
nursing assistants only the minimum wage to take care of our impaired family members as they age. Long-term facilities are very expensive as it is. Not only that, but we under-staff them as well. While there may be psychosocial interventions which would reduce assaultive patients with dementia, we do not want to pay people to provide them.
Given those conditions, what is left? Medications, that's what. Do we really want to expose underpaid and overworked caretakers to dangerous aggressive behavior from patients who basically have no life anyway - just to prevent a tiny percentage of them from dying a little sooner due to the medications' cardiovascular side effects? Time to either pay up or shut up.
Given those conditions, what is left? Medications, that's what. Do we really want to expose underpaid and overworked caretakers to dangerous aggressive behavior from patients who basically have no life anyway - just to prevent a tiny percentage of them from dying a little sooner due to the medications' cardiovascular side effects? Time to either pay up or shut up.
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