Lodi News-Sentinel

U.S. regulators OK first digital pill to track patients

- By Matthew Perrone

WASHINGTON — U.S. regulators have approved the first drug with a sensor that alerts doctors when the medication has been taken, offering a new way of monitoring patients but also raising privacy concerns.

The digital pill approved Monday combines two existing products: the former blockbuste­r psychiatri­c medication Abilify — long used to treat schizophre­nia and bipolar disorder — with a sensor tracking system first approved in 2012.

The technology is intended to help prevent dangerous emergencie­s that can occur when patients skip their medication, such as manic episodes experience­d by those suffering from bipolar disorder.

But developers Otsuka Pharmaceut­ical Co. and Proteus Digital Health are likely to face hurdles. The pill has not yet been shown to actually improve patients’ medication compliance, a feature insurers are likely to insist on before paying for the pill. Additional­ly, patients must be willing to allow their doctors and caregivers to access the digital informatio­n.

These privacy issues are likely to crop up more often as drugmakers and medical device companies combine their products with technologi­es developed by Silicon Valley.

Experts say the technology could be a useful tool, but it will also change how doctors relate to their patients as they’re able to see whether they are following instructio­ns.

“It’s truth serum time,” said Arthur Caplan, a medical ethicist at NYU’s Langone Medical Center. “Is the doctor going to start yelling at me? Am I going to get a big accusatory speech? How will that interactio­n be handled?”

The technology carries risks for patient privacy too if there are breaches of medical data or unauthoriz­ed use as a surveillan­ce tool, said James Giordano, a professor of neurology at Georgetown University Medical Center.

“Could this type of device be used for real-time surveillan­ce? The answer is of course it could,” said Giordano.

The new pill, Abilify MyCite, is embedded with a digital sensor that is activated by stomach fluids, sending a signal to a patch worn by the patient and notifying a digital smartphone app that the medication has been taken.

The FDA stressed however that there are limitation­s to monitoring patients.

“Abilify MyCite should not be used to track drug ingestion in ‘real-time’ or during an emergency,” the statement said, “because detection may be delayed or may not occur.”

Patients can track their dosage on their smartphone and allow their doctors, family or caregivers to access the informatio­n through a website.

While it’s the first time the FDA has approved such a pill, various specialty pharmacies and hospitals in the U.S. have previously “packaged” various drugs and sensors.

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