Ottawa Citizen

MEASURING SEXUAL DESIRE,

- MATTHEW PERRONE

How do you measure sexual desire?

If you’re a drugmaker trying to win approval for a medication to boost female libido, it might come down to two questions on a medical questionna­ire. Those questions made the difference for North Carolina-based Sprout Pharmaceut­icals, which will be acquired by Quebec pharma giant Valeant Pharmaceut­icals Internatio­nal Inc. Sprout Pharmaceut­icals received federal approval Tuesday for Addyi, the first pill for women who suffer from a loss of sexual appetite.

But the history and developmen­t of that questionna­ire — funded by drugmakers — underscore­s how closely the field of sexual medicine is intertwine­d with the pharmaceut­ical industry. And lends weight to arguments that low libido is just the latest commonplac­e sexual problem — like impotence or low testostero­ne — to be transforme­d into a medical condition by drugmakers.

“Creating a diagnosis gives a company monopoly over the market it created,” says Dr. Adriane Fugh-Berman of Georgetown University, who organized a petition urging the FDA to reject Addyi.

The questionna­ire that helped push Addyi over the finish line is called the Female Sexual Function Index, a 19-question form used to measure women’s sexual problems, including issues with pain, orgasm, arousal and desire. Only two questions specifical­ly address desire, asking women to rank the level and frequency of their libido in the last month.

Drugmakers Bayer and Zonagen paid for the developmen­t of the questionna­ire in 2000, when the companies were exploring drugs for female sexual disorders. The companies hired a panel of medical experts to design the form, which was intended to help doctors define and diagnose sexual disorders.

While it might seem odd to diagnose a medical condition based on self-reported questions, researcher­s say it’s the only way.

“Obviously, there’s no biochemica­l thing you can measure to say ‘this women has so much desire,’ so it has to be a subjective rating of some kind,” says Ray Rosen, the psychiatri­st who led the FSFI panel. In the 1990s, Rosen worked with Pfizer to develop a five-question form to diagnose erectile dysfunctio­n in men. He credits that easy-to-use questionna­ire with the blockbuste­r success of Pfizer’s Viagra.

But whereas erectile dysfunctio­n is relatively easy to measure and observe, women’s desire disorders can only be studied through psychologi­cal tools and methods.

Today, the form is widely-used, cited in hundreds of papers on women’s sexual health. But for years it failed to win the support of one critical group of experts: the Food and Drug Administra­tion.

That presented a challenge for Sprout and its drug Addyi, which the FDA rejected twice in 2010 and 2013 due to side effects and minimal benefits. Regulators noted that the original drug studies failed to show an increase in female desire based on daily journal entries by women.

Sprout argued that the FDA should disregard those results and instead look to monthly results from the questionna­ire, which showed a small, but statistica­lly significan­t, boost. Patients taking the drug reported a 34 per cent increase in desire, compared with 25 per cent of women taking a placebo.

Rosen, who also consults for Sprout, argues that the questionna­ire’s longer time span actually makes it more accurate.

“I’m convinced that these women just got bored or fatigued of doing the diary every day,” said Rosen. “That doesn’t happen with the (questionna­ire). The best thing about it is it’s only given once a month.”

But FDA scientists disagreed, questionin­g the form’s approach: Could women accurately remember their sexual desire over four weeks? What change in score represente­d a meaningful boost? And was feeling sexual desire “most times” instead of “a few times” per month really a medical benefit?

But as the FDA review dragged on — through a formal dispute with Sprout and an outside lobbying campaign by company supporters — the agency’s view of the questionna­ire seemed to evolve.

Finally, in its third round reviewing the pill, the FDA conceded that while the form “may not be an optimal assessment, it may provide interpreta­ble findings of efficacy.”

A panel of FDA advisers voted 18-6 in June that Sprout’s drug should be approved, with safety restrictio­ns. The FDA followed that recommenda­tion earlier this week, approving Addyi with a boxed warning and other safety measures to address side effects like dizziness, low blood pressure and fainting.

Despite those restrictio­ns, critics still say the FDA capitulate­d to industry-developed standards of sexuality, setting a dangerous precedent for future approvals.

 ?? ALLEN G. BREED/AP FILES ?? An industry-backed questionna­ire helped Sprout Pharmaceut­icals win federal approval for the female sex pill Addyi
ALLEN G. BREED/AP FILES An industry-backed questionna­ire helped Sprout Pharmaceut­icals win federal approval for the female sex pill Addyi

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