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Showing posts with label Eli Lilly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eli Lilly. Show all posts

Monday, March 22, 2010

The Zyprexa Documents

In January 2009, drug company involvement in promoting the explosion of new and phony bipolar disorder diagnoses was clearly demonstrated by company memos that leaked out as part of a Justice Department settlement against the maker of the atypical antipsychotic Zyprexa (Ely Lilly) for off-label marketing of the drug. These memos were supposed to be kept secret, but were obtained by reporter Alex Berenson of the New York Times, as mentioned in an article in the paper on December 18, 2006. They were later put on the internet by another reporter, Philip Dawdy of the Seattle Weekly, on his Furious Seasons website (http://www.furiousseasons.com/zyprexadocs.html).

One of their strategies was marketing for “NCE’s” (New Clinical Entities) which were off-label indications. They specifically targeted doctors who would be seeing patients with substance-related disorders, anxiety, aggression, or borderline personality disorder. Family practitioners and other primary care doctors were singled out, but psychiatrists were also affected.

While admitting that Zyprexa was not indicated for "bipolar II," they nonetheless tried to convince doctors that relatively high functioning patients who were susceptible to "bouts of depression, low self esteem and pessimism about the future, then rebounding with bursts of high energy and social engagement" really had bipolar disorder. They knew doctors did not like using lithium and that they might feel that there was too much to manage with depakote, so that they could be easily convinced to use Zyprexa.

Their vision for primary care docs was to expand Lilly's market by "redefining how primary care physicians diagnose and treat complicated mood disorders." Marketing messages were to be aimed at "patient's symptoms and behaviors (rather than diagnosis)." The doctor was to be made to understand that the company reps were not talking about the seriously ill patient but the "complicated patient who has mood symptoms of irritability, anxiety, poor sleep and mood swings."

Fellow training director Aftab Khan describes a certain type of patient that he labels as having "Crappy Childhood Syndrome (CCS)." He says that whenever a particular patient has several of these diagnoses at the same time: Major depressive disorder, panic disorder, PTSD, generalized anxiety disorder, bipolar disorder not otherwise specified, bipolar II, intermittent explosive disorder, or somatoform pain disorder - or their diagnoses changes from one provider to the next or from one admission to next - then CCS is most likely what they really have.

I could not have said it better myself, although I would add that these patients continue to have highly negative interactions with their dysfunctional social systems even as adults.