| Wyeth's Off-Label
Promotion of Prempro Leads to 5,200 Lawsuits March
30,
2007
News Source:
Lawyers and Settlements
By Evelyn Pringle
Washington, DC: For many years,
Wyeth led women to believe that taking Prempro, with the combined
hormones of estrogen and progestin, would not only relieve hot flashes,
vaginal dryness, night sweats, and moodiness, but it would also prevent
heart disease, osteoporosis, and mental deterioration. Very little of
that advice now appears to be true.
The latest FDA approved labeling for
Prempro states in part:
"Do not use estrogens and progestins to
prevent heart disease, heart attacks, strokes, or dementia. Using
estrogens and progestins may increase your chances of getting heart
attacks, strokes, breast cancer, or blood clots. Using estrogens, with
or without progestins, may increase your risk of dementia, based on a
study of women age 65 years or older."
Prempro was approved as a hormone
replacement therapy to treat menopause and prevent osteoporosis only.
The wide-spread over-prescribing of the drug for other conditions was a
result of Wyeth promoting the drug for off-label uses.
Off-label refers to the practice of
physicians prescribing an FDA approved medication for uses other than
the indications listed on the drug's label. While this practice may be
justified in exceptional cases, critics say, HRT illustrates the damage
that can occur when off-label prescribing becomes routine.
The widespread myths about the cures of
hormone therapy began in 1965, when Dr Robert Wilson, published the
book, "Feminine Forever," without revealing that he was a consultant to
Wyeth, the maker of the hormone drug Premarin.
By the mid-1970's, a clinical trial
showed that Premarin increased the risk of endometrial cancer, and a
scientific panel had rejected virtually all of its benefits except for
hot flashes and vaginal dryness. When Premarin sales fell, Wyeth added
progestin to the pill, and created HRT.
The vast popularity of HRT, was in large
part due to Wyeth's successful efforts to promote the off-label use of
Prempro through the media by providing information which overstated its
benefits and downplayed the cancer risks. For instance, a May 25, 1992,
Newsweek article, entitled, "Every Woman for Herself," stated in part,
estrogen replacement therapy:
"almost always zaps hot flashes, soothes
vaginal dryness, improves bladder problems, evens out mood swings, and
clears up short-term memory loss. It also combats the more serious
effects of estrogen deficiency: osteoporosis and an elevated risk of
heart attacks. The hormone retards bone loss and cuts death from heart
attacks in half."
An article in the October 1997, Ladies
Home Journal, stated: "A woman's chance of dying from heart disease is
more than five times greater than dying from breast cancer, and HRT
lowers that risk."
A story in the September 1998, Better
Homes and Gardens, told women, "talk to your doctor about taking
estrogen or hormone replacement therapy."
"Research has shown," the article stated,
"that estrogen and HRT may reduce the risk of heart attack after
menopause by as much as 50 percent."
As part of a Wyeth-sponsored American
Heart Association campaign in 1998, the media received a pamphlet
entitled, "Take Charge! A Woman's Guide to Fighting Heart Disease."
It listed loss of estrogen first under
risk factors for heart disease, and stated: "Estrogen replacement helps
protect against coronary heart disease risk."
What critics say is most disturbing, is
that the media continued to publish articles with similar statements
even after the 1998 Heart and Estrogen/Progestin Replacement Study,
which found that women who used HRT actually had a higher rate of heart
disease during the first year of therapy.
It got to the point where the National
Institute of Health decided that the use of hormones for disease
prevention had to be studied precisely because doctors were prescribing
the drugs off-label to so many women, even though long-term safety and
efficacy had not been established.
In 2002, millions of women quit taking
hormone pills, after an 8-year study was halted by the NIH after five
years. The study by the Women's Health Initiative included 16,000 women
and found that women who received HRT had significant increases in
breast cancer, heart attacks, strokes, and blood clots.
The principal investigators of the study
reported that further trials to test other estrogen and progestin
formulations would be unethical and a waste of tax dollars because there
was no reason to believe any other formulations would render a different
result.
Similarly, they said, there would be no
reason to test HRT for the prevention of heart disease in women 50 to
59-years-old, because one third of the WHI's volunteers were in their
50's, and they had the highest increased risk of stroke.
Within 3 months after the study was
released, Wyeth's stock had fallen more than 55%, eroding its $48
billion in market value, according to
TradingMarkets.com on February 28, 2007.
Critics of the study claim that it was
the type of hormones, the dose, and the method of use which increased
the health risks. The study tested HRT with estrogen made from the urine
of pregnant horses, and some experts believe that estrogen from plant
sources is better suited for treating menopause because it is closer to
what the human body produces.
The most common risks associated with HRT,
are blood clots, which can cut off the blood supply to vital organs and,
in the most serious cases, a pulmonary embolism can occur if a clot
travels to the lungs from another area of the body.
A recent study by French researchers in
the journal Circulation, compared 271 women who suffered blood clots to
610 women without clots and found that women taking hormone pills orally
were over 4 times more likely to develop clots than women who did not
take hormones or who received them from patches, gels or creams.
Hormones delivered through the skin cause
fewer blood clots, doctors say, because they enter the bloodstream
directly, similar to natural hormones. When taken in pill form, the
drugs must be metabolized by the liver triggering some of the unwanted
side effects before entering the blood stream.
Since the release of the 2002 study,
Wyeth's massive off-label promotion of HRT has come back to haunt the
drug giant. According to SEC filings, as of December 31, 2006, there
were approximately 5,200 lawsuits pending against the company filed on
behalf of approximately 8,400 women for injuries related to its HRT,
with about 60% of the cases filed in federal courts and 40% in state
courts.
The latest lawsuit was filed by Nancey
Land, a retired South Carolina teacher, who blames her breast cancer on
Prempro, according to The State on March 2, 2007.
Ms Land's attorney, Ken Suggs, won a case
against Wyeth in February 2007, when a Philadelphia jury returned a $3
million verdict for a 67-year-old Dayton, Ohio, woman who said Prempro
caused her breast cancer which resulted in a double mastectomy,
chemotherapy, and radiation.
The woman initially won $1.5 million in
October 2006, but a mistrial was later declared after a juror was found
to be ineligible, Mr Suggs told The State.
During the retrial, the jury was told
that Wyeth knew for decades that HRT could cause breast cancer but
failed to warn patients.
In January 2007, Mr Suggs' law firm also
handled a trial where the jury awarded $1.5 million to an Arkansas
woman.
So far, Wyeth has won two cases in
federal court.
Prempro Legal Help
If you or a loved one has suffered from
breast cancer as a result of taking taken progestin or a combination of
progestin and estrogen, or you were diagnosed with breast cancer while
taking HRT or within one year thereafter, please contact a [Prempro]
lawyer who will evaluate your claim at no charge.
Contact Information:
Janet Jenner & Suggs, LLC
Columbia, SC 29202
Toll Free Phone: (800) 895-7550
Phone: (803) 726-0050
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