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Merck Attempts to Escape Responsibility for Vioxx Deaths
Self-Financed Study Ignores Facts Showing the Company Marketed
a Drug it Knew Carried Serious Heart Risks
Thursday, September 7, 2006 (Washington, DC)In their
most recent attempt to avoid accountability for their deadly drug
Vioxx, Merck on Wednesday released a report paid for by the
company to the tune of $21 million claiming the New Jersey-based
pharmaceutical giant acted responsibly in the handling of the drug
that led to the deaths of as many as 55,000 people.
Merck is clearly beginning a coordinated campaign to cleanse
its soiled reputation, said Jon Haber, chief executive
officer of the Association of Trial Lawyers of America. This
is an absurd attempt to whitewash Mercks increasingly clear
responsibility for endangering consumers lives.
The Merck-financed report was released in advance of the second anniversary
of the company pulling Vioxx from the market. Merck paid $21 million
to six researchers it characterized as independent to
exonerate the company of responsibility. None of those involved in
writing the report were asked to disclose any financial conflicts
of interest.
Merck has proved hesitant to reveal what it knows about the dangers
presented by Vioxx, pulled from the market in September 2004 amid
reports it was causing serious, sometimes fatal, heart problems for
some users.
After initially rejecting claims that Vioxx increased heart risks,
Merck reluctantly admitted that heart problems could develop in patients
after 18 months of use. Now the company acknowledges the statistics
collated to arrive at the 18 month finding were misinterpreted.
Documents released as the result of the lawsuits filed against the
firm show Merck scientists were worried about Vioxx's potential cardiovascular
risks as early as 1997, two years before the company began selling
the drug. Dr. Edward M. Scolnick, at the time Merck's top scientist,
said in March 2000 that the largest clinical trial conducted on Vioxx
confirmed it carried heart risks.
Merck tried to mislead doctors about those findings, going so far
as to produce a marketing document instructing sales representatives
to play Dodgeball when doctors voiced concerns about Vioxxs
risks. In addition, the editor of the New England Journal of Medicine
accused Merck of misrepresenting the results of a Vioxx clinical trial.
This report is complete nonsense, and should be recognized
as the expensive fluff piece of corporate propaganda that it is,
Haber said.
Below are the facts about Mercks deadly drug Vioxx:
The Facts About Vioxx
FACT: Mercks own memos prove the company knew Vioxx had
heart risks as early as 1997. Those risks were confirmed by a clinical
trial in 2000.
- The [internal Merck] documents showed that scientists at
Merck were worried about Vioxx's potential cardiovascular risks
as early as 1997, two years before Merck began selling the drug.
The possibility of increased C.V. events is of great concern,
Dr. Alise Reicin, a Merck scientist, wrote in a 1997 e-mail message;
C.V. events is scientific shorthand for cardiovascular
problems like strokes or heart attacks.
The documents
also revealed that Dr. Edward M. Scolnick, who at the time was Merck's
top scientist, said in March 2000 that the largest clinical trial
ever conducted of Vioxx confirmed that Vioxx had heart risks, as
he had feared. [The New York Times, 8/21/05; emphasis
added]
FACT: Merck invented a game called dodgeball to teach
drug representatives how to evade doctors tough questions about
the safety of Vioxx.
- [Mark Lanier, the plaintiffs attorney] also introduced
a marketing videotape that showed Merck sales representatives being
trained to view doctors' concerns about Vioxx's heart risks as obstacles
to be avoided or dismissed. Another marketing document taught
representatives to play Dodgeball when doctors voiced
concerns. [The New York Times, 8/21/05; emphasis added]
- Merck told its sales representatives that its painkiller
Vioxx did not increase the risk of heart attacks, according to a
Merck training video played on Wednesday for jurors in the first
Vioxx lawsuit to reach trial. The video, which had never before
been publicly shown, also depicts actors playing Merck representatives
avoiding a question about Vioxx's potential to increase blood pressure
-- a documented side effect. While the training tape was never shown
to doctors or consumers, its existence may further undercut Merck's
claim that the company properly disclosed Vioxx's risks during the
five years the drug was on the market. In the video, an actress
playing an obstacle to Vioxx sales says, I'm afraid
Vioxx causes M.I.'s -- a reference to myocardial infarctions,
or heart attacks. In response, an actress playing a Merck sales
representative says, That's not true.
Merck made
the videotape in 2000, as it struggled to increase Vioxx sales despite
concerns by doctors and independent scientists that the drug might
damage the heart. [The New York Times, 7/21/05; emphasis
added]
FACT: Internal company documents suggest Merck allegedly delayed
strengthening Vioxxs warning label to make an extra $229 million
in profits.
- Lanier also showed jurors Merck internal analyses in 2001
and 2002 of the estimated amount of lost Vioxx sales if Merck put
new warnings or precautions on its label, the subject of private
negotiations with the FDA at the time. It figured a strict warning
would reduce projected sales by at least 50 percent, according to
the analysis by then-president of Merck's Human Health division,
David Anstice. Another put it at $229 million in 2002.
[The Philadelphia Inquirer, 4/6/06; emphasis added]
- [Mark Lanier] showed documents suggesting Merck shielded
studies from regulatory scrutiny and was successful at delaying
an FDA-suggested October 2001 labeling change. There was a push
to change the label after a 2000 study showed Vioxx users suffered
five times as many heart attacks as those who took an older painkiller,
naproxen, which is also known under the brand name Aleve. The
delay into 2002 allowed Merck, Lanier said, to sell Vioxx another
four months without adding the risk information and to garner another
$229 million in sales it would have lost if the label was changed.
[Chicago Tribune, 8/21/05; emphasis added]
FACT: The editor of the New England Journal of Medicine accused
Merck of withholding data on Vioxx.
- In an editorial published in the December 29, 2005 edition of
the New England Journal of Medicine, Dr. Gregory D. Curfman, the
Journals editor, accused Merck of misrepresenting the results
of its clinical trial of Vioxx. Dr. Curfman claimed that when Merck
submitted information regarding the clinical trial to the Journal,
it failed to include information on three heart attacks that occurred
during the trial:
Until the end of November 2005, we believed that these [myocardial
infarctions] were late events that were not known to the authors
in time to be included in the article published in the Journal on
November 23, 2000. It now appears, however, from a memorandum
dated July 5, 2000, that was obtained by subpoena in the Vioxx litigation
and made available to the Journal, that at least two of the authors
knew about the three additional myocardial infarctions at least
two weeks before the authors submitted the first of two revisions
and 4 1/2 months before publication of the article. Given this
memorandum, it appears that there was ample time to include the
data on these three additional infarctions in the article.
In addition, the memorandum of July 5, 2000, contained other data
on cardiovascular adverse events that we believe would have been
relevant to the article. We determined from a computer diskette
that some of these data were deleted from the VIGOR manuscript two
days before it was initially submitted to the Journal on May 18,
2000. Taken together, these inaccuracies and deletions call into
question the integrity of the data on adverse cardiovascular events
in this article. [Expression of Concern: Bombardier
et al., Comparison of Upper Gastrointestinal Toxicity of Rofecoxib
and Naproxen in Patients with Rheumatoid Arthritis, N Engl
J Med 2000; 343:1520-8., New England Journal of Medicine,
12/29/05; emphasis added]
FACT: Dr. David Graham, a scientist at the Food and Drug Administration,
in testimony before the U.S. Congress, said that Vioxx contributed
to the death of as many as 55,000 people in the United States.
- Raymond V. Gilmartin, Merck's chief executive, testified
Thursday that his company followed a rigorous scientific process
as it examined the risks and benefits of Vioxx. But Dr. [David]
Graham and other witnesses [testifying before the U.S. Senate Finance
Committee] severely criticized Merck, saying the company should
have acted years earlier to confirm the risks of Vioxx. Dr. Graham
raised his estimates of those in the United States who had suffered
heart attacks or stroke as result of taking Vioxx to a range of
88,000 to 139,000, up from 28,000. As many as 40 percent
of these people, or about 55,000, died as a result, he said.
Dr. Gurkirpal Singh, an adjunct clinical professor at Stanford University,
said at the hearing that Merck scientists had tried to intimidate
him after he publicly raised questions about the effects of Vioxx.
Dr. Singh, a rheumatologist and science officer of the Institute
of Clinical Outcomes Research and Education in Woodside, Calif.,
said: I was warned that if I continued in this fashion there
would be serious consequences for me. I was told that Dr. Louis
Sherwood, a Merck senior vice president and a former chief of medicine
at a medical school, had extensive contacts within academia and
could make life very difficult for me at Stanford and outside.
[New York Times, 11/19/04; emphasis added]
###
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