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(January 4, 2006) -- Reports of
sudden deaths, strokes, heart attacks and hypertension in both children and
adults taking drugs to treat attention deficit hyperactivity disorder are
spurring new government study into the medications' safety.
Sales of drugs to treat ADHD have increased sharply in recent years, with use
growing at a faster rate among adults than children, according to a recent study
by Medco Health Solutions, a prescription benefit manager. Spending on
ADHD
drugs soared from $759 million in 2000 to $3.1 billion in 2004, according to IMS
Health, a pharmaceutical information and consulting firm.
The Food and Drug Administration said it had received reports of what it
called "serious adverse events" — including deaths — in association with the
therapeutic use of the drugs. No additional details on those events were
immediately available.
The FDA's Canadian counterpart, Health Canada, yanked the ADHD drug
Adderall
XR from the market for six months last year in response to reports of 20 sudden
deaths and 12 strokes in adults and children using the drug. A number of the
cases involved children with structural heart defects.
The panel eventually concluded there was inadequate evidence of increased
harm from Adderall XR compared with other available therapies — a conclusion the
FDA also reached based on data on hand.
Now the U.S. regulatory agency is asking its Drug Safety and Risk Management
advisory committee to examine ways of studying further the potential
cardiovascular risks of the drugs. The few studies that have looked at
longer-term use of ADHD drugs provide little information on those risks, the FDA
said.
"It almost sounds like cox-2 inhibitor redux," said committee chairman Dr.
Peter Gross, referring to cox-2 painkillers like Vioxx and Bextra pulled from
the market because of evidence they can raise the risk of a heart attack or
stroke.
The committee is to meet Feb. 9 and 10 in Gaithersburg, Md.
"The issue of drug treatment of attention deficit disorder in children has
been a controversial one without this issue of cardiovascular risk too. It adds
another concern to what will certainly be an interesting conversation," said
Arthur Levin, the FDA committee's consumer representative.
A posting to the FDA Web site did not identify any of the drugs by name.
However, the most commonly used ADHD drugs include Adderall XR, made by Shire
Pharmaceuticals, and Ritalin, made by Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corp. Various
other companies make generic versions of Ritalin as well.
Shire spokesman Matthew Cabrey said the company hadn't been told of the
meeting but added it may send representatives. Novartis did not immediately
return a call seeking comment.
The committee's Feb. 10 meeting will include updates on FDA actions on cox-2
drugs as well as a recently begun patient, doctor and pharmacist registry
program for the anti-acne drug Accutane and its generic competitors.
Separately, the committee also will discuss the FDA's Drug Safety Oversight
Board, an internal, government employee-only panel created nearly a year ago.
The board is supposed to monitor FDA-approved medicines once they're on the
market and update physicians and patients with emerging information on risks and
benefits.
Gross said he had concerns about the board's impartiality and independence,
as well as its relationship to his committee and the very similar work it does.
next:
Ritalin May Slow Growth
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Reviewed: 01/2006
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