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FEDS
MAY TRACK SEX DIFFERENCES IN DRUG REACTIONS
By
Suzanne Batchelor - WEnews Correspondent

(WOMENSENEWS)--As
research continues to emerge showing women respond differently and
sometimes more adversely than men to widely used medications including
antihistamines, antibiotics and painkillers, women's health advocates
are pressing Congress to fund a permanent database to track gender,
race and age differences in clinical drug trial results.
Congress created
such a program last year on a one-year trial basis following two
U.S. General Accounting Office reports critical of the Food and
Drug Administration's oversight of drug research. One of the reports
found that eight of 10 drugs the agency pulled off the market over
a four-year period caused increased harm in women.
"Most physicians
and patients are still not aware that sex matters when prescribing
medications," says Sherry Marts, scientific director of the
Society for Women's Health Research, a Washington nonprofit group
campaigning for the database, which is scheduled to expire on Oct.
1 at the start of the new federal fiscal year.
The program's
researchers studied how best to standardize incoming drug-trial
information on safety and efficacy and designed a database to track
and compare drug responses by gender, race and age. If the program
is made permanent, the database will compile gender, race and age
differences from drug trials in a way that can be shared--after
drug approval--with other federal agencies such as the National
Institutes of Health.
"We would
like to see there's money set aside to get the database up and running
and continue. This is not a one-shot, one-year thing. We want to
see it grow," says Roberta Biegel, director of government relations
for the Society for Women's Health Research.
FDA Supports
Push for Database
The 2001 General
Accounting Office report on the 10 drugs removed from the market
from Jan. 1, 1997 through Dec. 31, 2000 by the FDA found that the
agency failed to analyze gender differences in drug-safety data
from clinical trials, even when drug companies included it in their
reports, as required by law. It also found that while the drug makers
reported to the FDA that their late-stage drug trials included 55
percent women, only 22 percent of subjects in the companies' early
safety and tolerability trials were female.
Margaret Miller
of the FDA's Office of Women's Health says a permanent database,
stocked with the newly standardized drug-trial information, would
avoid the need to remove a drug from the market by highlighting
patterns of adverse reactions among women, African Americans and
other groups before it reaches the public.
"The analysis
you could do with it would be incredible. You could look at adverse
events by age group and across drugs, and hopefully have a good
public health impact from that data," Miller says. "We
like practical at the FDA."
"We would
like to see the information incorporated into product labels,"
Miller adds, so that doctors and patients could adjust dosages by
gender, ethnic group or age, based on drug-trial results reported
to FDA.
Safety and
Efficacy of Many Drugs Vary by Gender
Miller says
the new database would also allow the FDA to make sure statistically
sufficient numbers of women, minorities and age groups are included
in drug trials.
Research on
many widely used drugs indicates safety and efficacy can vary according
to gender. Studies published in 1997 and 1999 indicated women wake
up faster from general anesthesia and suffer more of its side effects
than men. A 1999 study led by Dr. Jon Levine found pain drugs called
kappa-opioids bring greater relief to women than men. Researchers
say they don't yet know why women respond differently.
"Drug companies
still refuse to study women very early in a drug's development,"
says Dr. Raymond Woosley, vice president of health science at the
Arizona Health Sciences Center in Tucson and a researcher on gender,
drugs and heart arrhythmias. "I think they are beginning to
look at this but it's not uniform. I think it should be part of
any analysis of a drug's action. I think it's just good biology
and it's good business for them to do that."
Yet some
drug companies resist gender testing, he says.
"They've
said in the past: 'If we have to study drugs in men and women, then
we've got to double the number of people we study.' That's not correct,"
Woosley says.
"They need
to use modern statistical methodology and they can do it with very
little change in the way or cost of developing a drug," Woosley
says. "Statistical methodology will allow you to tell the difference--if
there is one--between men and women without a large increase in
the amount of work that has to be done."
Irregular
Heart Rhythms Is Common Side Effect Influenced by Sex
Two common reasons
drugs get taken off the market are because they harm the liver or
cause irregular heart rhythms. In both instances, there's evidence
that women are harmed more than men, Woosley says.
Woosley researched
40 drugs known to sometimes cause irregular heart rhythms and found
that nearly a quarter of them posed greater risk to women than men
of developing potentially life-threatening arrhythmias. He has made
this research available on a Web site for the Arizona Center for
Education and Research on Therapeutics.
Pharmacia Corporation's
Norpace, a medication prescribed to remedy abnormal heart rhythms,
is listed on Woosley's site as causing more heart rhythm abnormalities
in women than in men. Pharmacia spokesman Mark Kranack did not return
several calls requesting comment on the drug's listing.
Abbott Pharmaceuticals,
whose antibiotic Erythrocin is listed on the registry as causing
greater heart rhythm abnormalities in women, would not comment on
the drug's inclusion on Woosley's site. PCE, Abbott's latest erythromycin
product, does warn in its package insert of such potential rhythm
abnormalities.
PCE's package
insert, however, does not mention that women are more likely to
suffer the potentially fatal heart arrhythmias. Abbott spokeswoman
Cindy Resman said women are known to be at higher risk than men
for such arrhythmias with or without drugs.
Erythrocin is
no longer sold by Abbott in the United States. In July, the FDA
posted additional label warnings for the drug of increased danger
to elderly patients of heart irregularities and hearing loss.
Abbott would
not comment on the decision to stop selling Erythrocin.
Suzanne Batchelor
has written for the national science series "Earth and Sky"
and on health and medicine for Medscape Health, Web MD and the Texas
Medical Association's "Healthline Texas."
For more
information:
Society for
Women's Health Research: - http://www.womens-health.org
Arizona's Center
for Education and Research on Therapeutics: - http://www.arizonacert.org
International
Registry for Drug-induced Arrhythmias: - http://www.qtdrugs.org
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Copyright 2002 Women's Enews www.womensenews.org
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