FDA Policies Kill

Guest Post by Walter E. Williams

FDA Policies Kill

Among the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s responsibilities are approval and regulation of pharmaceutical drugs. In short, its responsibility is to ensure the safety and effectiveness of drugs. In the performance of this task, FDA officials can make two types of errors — statistically known as the type I error and type II error. With respect to the FDA, a type I error is the rejection or delayed approval of a drug that is safe and effective — erring on the side of over-caution — and a type II error is the approval of a drug that has unanticipated dangerous side effects, or erring on the side of under-caution.

Let’s examine the incentives of FDA officials. If FDA officials err on the side of under-caution and approve a drug that has unanticipated dangerous side effects, the victims of their mistake will be highly visible. There may be congressional hearings, embarrassment to the agency and officials fired.

It’s an entirely different story if FDA officials err on the side of over-caution and either disapprove or delay the approval of a drug that is both safe and effective. In that case, the victims will be invisible. They will have no idea that their suffering could have been eliminated, or in the case of death, their loved ones will have no idea why they died. Their suffering and/or death will be chalked up to the state of medicine rather than the status of an FDA drug application. Their doctor will simply tell them there’s nothing more that can be done to help them. The FDA officials go scot-free.

Let’s look at some of the history of the FDA’s erring on the side of over-caution. Beta blockers reduce the risk of secondary heart attacks and were widely used in Europe during the mid-1970s. The FDA imposed a moratorium on approvals of beta blockers in the U.S. because of their carcinogenicity in animals. Finally, in 1981, the FDA approved the first such drug, boasting that it might save up to 17,000 lives per year. That means that as many as 100,000 people died from secondary heart attacks waiting for FDA approval. (http://tinyurl.com/ydxpvd54). Those people are in the “invisible graveyard,” a term to describe people who would have lived but died because the cure that could have saved them was bottled up in the FDA’s regulatory process.

Today, the Phoenix-based Goldwater Institute is leading the battle to bring some sanity and compassion to the drug approval process. It recently published a paper by Mark Flatten, titled “Studied to Death: FDA Overcaution Brings Deadly Consequences.” Flatten examined the FDA’s approval process and made some important recommendations. Flatten criticized some FDA practices, saying, “Instead of having to prove a new treatment is safe for its intended use, the FDA now reviews drugs based on how they might be used by doctors to treat individual patients, effectively substituting the judgment of agency regulators for that of practicing medical professionals.”

He added: “Instead of proving a drug achieves the medically beneficial results that its makers claim, the FDA requires proof the new treatment will improve long-term outcomes. So it is no longer enough, for instance, to prove a new drug will reduce blood glucose levels for diabetics. Drugmakers must show, somehow, that this will make patients live longer.”

One Goldwater Institute suggestion is to allow drugs approved in certain other countries, such as Canada and the European Union, to receive nearly automatic U.S. approval. After all, those countries have drug regulatory structures similar to that in the U.S. Why should treatments approved in those countries not be available here?

The Goldwater Institute is also calling for a bill to restore free speech in medicine. It thinks Congress should allow drug manufacturers to provide information about “off-label use.” This is a common practice in which doctors prescribe FDA-approved drugs to treat conditions other than those the FDA originally approved them for after new beneficial uses arise.

Strong evidence of FDA over-caution bias comes in the 1974 words of then-FDA Commissioner Alexander M. Schmidt: “In all of FDA’s history, I am unable to find a single instance where a congressional committee investigated the failure of FDA to approve a new drug.”

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8 Comments
Ham Roid
Ham Roid
December 19, 2018 3:31 pm

No matter what, if we put our trust in the FDA, or any other government organization to solve a problem, people are going to die.

FDA, controlling who dies and who profits from it.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Ham Roid
December 19, 2018 3:43 pm

They profit from it … they’re paid royalties on the stuff they approve (much of it).

Donkey Balls
Donkey Balls
  Anonymous
December 19, 2018 4:02 pm

Whaaaaaat? Who says?

Old Toad of Green Acres
Old Toad of Green Acres
  Anonymous
December 19, 2018 5:25 pm

FDA is paid to review products by the sponsor.

Old Toad of Green Acres
Old Toad of Green Acres
December 19, 2018 5:23 pm

FDA is like the local Priest @$5.1 B annual budget, NIH is the Cardinal @ $37 Billion.
The next black plague will be NIH, FDA is just a stupid, fat schoolyard bully.
Wanna flu shot little girl?

deplorably stanley
deplorably stanley
December 19, 2018 9:02 pm

I take a med that is available in every European country and most of the world. Not approved in the US because the company refused to run all of the identical trials and testing taking years and millions of dollars, just for the FDA. It’s been on the market for so long now the patent has expired.

I’ve been weaseling it into the US for more than 10 years by traveling abroad, and getting the occasional friend to bring it back. I would love not to have to go through that anymore.

The FDA isn’t looking out for US citizens, they are minding their own corporate interests in the revolving door of pharmaceutical companies, government agency power mongering, and shutting out foreign competitors. The American people can fuck right off, we are the least of their concerns.

Stucky
Stucky
December 20, 2018 12:40 pm

Absolute Fact 1: the FDA exists for Big Companies …. NOT us peon consumers.

Absolute Fact 2: the FDA is about as evil a governmental entity as there is.

I found a bottle last night, rubbed it, and out popped a Genie named Destroyer. He said he would grant me one wish regarding the utter destruction of any governmental agency I wanted. Without hesitation I said “The FDA!! Kill ’em all!!!”. And so it was done.

Then I woke up and cried bitterly when I realized it was just a dream.

KeyserSusie
KeyserSusie
December 20, 2018 8:48 pm

Here is an announcement from today. As one who had a stent placed in my large abdominal aortic aneuysm, it caught my attention.

“The US Food and Drug Administration warned on Thursday that the benefits of fluoroquinolone antibiotics do not outweigh the risks — which include aortic aneurysm — for certain patients, according to the latest research. The research is based on reports of patient problems and on studies published between 2015 and 2018.

Fluoroquinolone antibiotics are often used to treat serious respiratory infections, pneumonia, urinary tract infection, and even plague and exposure to anthrax. They include drugs sold under the names ciprofloxacin (Cipro), gemifloxacin (Factive), levofloxacin (Levaquin), moxifloxacin (Avelox), norfloxacin (Noroxin) and ofloxacin (Floxin).”

And as a long time prescriber of pills, I believe antibiotics are way over used.

more here:
http://www.phillytrib.com/news/health/certain-antibiotics-may-cause-aortic-aneurysm-fda-warns/article_df14659e-a8e6-569d-9bfd-048173f325f0.html