Wednesday, November 26, 2008

PFIZER ; SAVING LIVES 10YEARS AND MORE

Many of us were invited to KL Hilton last night to dinner, commemorating 10 years of Lipitor ( Atorvastatin Calcium-crystalline ). It was a nice event, with drum beating and dinner games for group participation. The Chinese sit down dinner food was good. Portion a little thin. There must be about 130 of us present. I think that Pfizer Malaysia also wanted to take this occasion to introduce their new country manager, Mr Ameet, to the doctors in the Klang Valley.
I was happy to go because Pfizer is probably the best pharma supporter of medical CME programs. I have been running CMEs for GPs for the last 7 years, and Pfizer has never failed to lend support, with no strings attached. Since we were teaching medical therapy, they knew that their products, full of medical evidence, will always be mentioned. I like that approach. Of course when you have top sellers like Lipitor and Norvasc, with volumes of clinical trial results to back you, sales must come quite easy. Well, yes and no.
For the last 8-9 years, the answer is probably yes. They raked up record sales with lipitor and norvasc, and their number 1 pharma position, in global sales of these two products, was never challenged. But we are now seeing a very real threat from generics as the patent on both their top sellers expire. I gather that the dinner last night, besides introducing their new country manager, was also to remind us again of the clinical trial data of Lipitor, as lipitor nears sunset. The problem I have with that was that they were preaching to the converted. People who already knew that lipitor is good. I was hoping, when I went, that they will highlight the 10 years of achievement of lipitor, and how many patient lives Lipitor have potentially saved ( based on extrapolated medical evidence ), and helped.
Of course, as I can see, there are many challenges facing Pfizer. The rising cost of healthcare will make many countries accept generics. With patency expiring on their prima products, the generics barrier is lowered. Of course, their cardiovascular range of new drugs to " take over " from Lipitor and Norvasc, has dried up, when their " Torcetoprib ( their block-buster HDL-C raiser )" was withrawn from clinical trials, due to the increasing CVS risk. The loss of " Torcetoprib " was indeed a very big loss. I understand that they still have an anti-thrombotic, in the pipeline. But this is not a drug in the Lipitor or Norvasc standard.
I personally will want to wish Pfizer well. I hope for another decade of saving even more lives. They are a good company, but these are trying times. I am afraid that without big pharmas with good corporate governance and good medical proven drugs, our CME programs will suffer. Doctors will have less opportunity for updates and medical practice standards will suffer. Yes, generic drugs are cheaper, but are they good enough? Are they good enough for patient care and also for helping to raise the practice standards of the medical doctors in Malaysia. Will generic companies take up the CME challenge?
I

1 comment:

Kong said...

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/12/02/AR2008120202303.html

Generic Heart Drugs as Good as Brand-Name Counterparts

By Amanda Gardner
HealthDay Reporter
Tuesday, December 2, 2008; 12:00 AM

TUESDAY, Dec. 2 (HealthDay News) -- Brand-name drugs used to treat cardiovascular disease are no better than generics, a new review of available evidence shows.

Yet a number of editorials in medical journals, written by specialists, have urged against substituting the less expensive generics for their designer counterparts.

"We found no evidence that brand-name drugs are any better in terms of clinical outcomes than generic drugs," said Dr. Aaron S. Kesselheim, lead author of a study appearing in the Dec. 3 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association and an instructor in medicine at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston. "The FDA [U.S. Food and Drug Administration] has approved all generic drugs and certifies that they are bioequivalent, meaning equivalent in all biological and chemical characteristics of the drug."

The challenge then becomes one of perception, Kesselheim said, with this new paper itself representing "hopefully another step in helping combat the misperception that brand-name drugs are clinically superior," he said.

The findings come closely on the heels of another study which found that there is often little evidence that off-label prescribing (prescribing a drug to treat a disease or condition different from the one it was approved for) is effective or safe.

Generic drugs have the same active ingredient as their brand-name counterparts, but may differ in terms of the color or shape of the pill and some of the inert binders (which are not clinically active).

The advantage to generic medications, of course, is that they cost substantially less.

The developers of drugs are permitted to exclusively market the drug for a finite period of time after its approval, at least partly to recoup the costs of developing the medication. After that time, however, other manufacturers may produce the same drug as a generic.

"There are a number of studies out there saying that generic drugs should be an important part of a physicians prescribing treatment, that they're able to reduce costs and improve patient adherence which can lead to better patient outcomes," Kesselheim said. "Generic drugs are available for nearly every condition but generally are underused in the marketplace, and one of the reasons they're underused is that there is a perception out there among physicians and patients that brand-name drugs are better than generic drugs."

Kesselheim and his colleagues decided to investigate the data to see if brand-name drugs really were superior.

They searched for articles comparing the clinical efficacy of brand-name and generic cardiovascular drugs published between January 1984 and August 2008.

All of the studies involving beta blockers, antiplatelet agents, statins, ACE inhibitors and alpha-blockers showed clinical equivalence, while 91 percent of randomized controlled trials showed clinical equivalence for diuretics, and 71 percent showed the same for calcium-channel blockers.

Yet 53 percent of 43 editorials had a negative take on substituting generic drugs.

"We found no evidence that a brand-name drug is clinically superior," Kesselheim said.

Almost half of the trials and nearly all of the editorial and commentaries failed to identify funding sources.

"The key is, are the drugs therapeutically equivalent. In other words, do you get the same result," said Robert Stanberry, an assistant professor of pharmacy practice at Texas A&M Health Science Center Irma Lerma Rangel College of Pharmacy at Kingsville. "I would tend to agree, that's mostly true."