The Arizona Republic

Study: 10% of drugs OKed by FDA fall short of goals

- Ken Alltucker

One in 10 new drugs were cleared by federal drug regulators in recent years based on studies that didn’t achieve their main goals, a new study shows.

The study by Harvard and Yale researcher­s found that of 210 new therapies approved by the Food and Drug Administra­tion from 2018-2021, 21 drugs were based on studies that had one or more goals, or end points, that weren’t achieved. Those 21 drugs were approved to treat cancer, Alzheimer’s and other diseases.

Researcher­s said the findings raise questions about whether the federal agency’s drug approvals lack transparen­cy about some products’ safety and effectiven­ess.

Reshma Ramachandr­an, an assistant professor at Yale School of Medicine who co-wrote the study, said doctors, patients and health insurers depend on the FDA to rigorously vet new drugs.

The federal agency needs to reassure the public that “the rubber stamp that they gave – considered the gold standard around the world – really means the drug has been proven to have safety and efficacy that outweighs any risks,” she said.

The researcher­s reviewed FDA documents to evaluate whether the clinical trials met their main “end points,” or goals that measure whether a drug works.

Of the 21 drugs that did not meet goals:

Four targeted different types of cancer.

Three targeted influenza and other infectious diseases.

Three were psychiatri­c drugs, including for schizophre­nia and ADHD.

Others targeted blood cancers, Alzheimer’s disease, and lung, digestive and genetic diseases.

The FDA’s controvers­ial approval of the Alzheimer’s drug aducanumab prompted researcher­s to find how often the agency approved drugs treatments despite clinical trials with failed or mixed results.

In 2021, Biogen’s aducanumab gained approval despite two clinical trials that were ended early and yielded mixed results. The approval became the target of a congressio­nal investigat­ion that concluded the FDA sidesteppe­d outside experts who said trials failed to prove clinical benefit of the drug.

Biogen initially charged $56,000 a year for the drug but slashed the price in half amid criticism that it was too expensive. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services refused to pay for the drug outside clinical trials.

Of the 21 drugs identified by researcher­s, 13 received expedited review by the federal agency.

Ramachandr­an said doctors and patients who don’t have time to comb through the underlying medical studies often don’t know about missed clinical goals. She added that drug company-issued press releases announcing new, often costly drugs tend to highlight positive data without a balanced analysis of full results.

“That sort of communicat­ion is really necessary to know how certain we are whether this is safe and effective – especially for brand-name drugs that are very costly for patients,” Ramachandr­an said.

FDA officials did not immediatel­y respond to a query about the study.

 ?? PROVIDED BY BIOGEN VIA AP ?? The FDA’s controvers­ial approval of the Alzheimer’s drug aducanumab prompted researcher­s to find how often the agency approved drugs treatments despite clinical trials with failed or mixed results.
PROVIDED BY BIOGEN VIA AP The FDA’s controvers­ial approval of the Alzheimer’s drug aducanumab prompted researcher­s to find how often the agency approved drugs treatments despite clinical trials with failed or mixed results.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States