The Irish Mail on Sunday

Is acne drug Roaccutane safe?

A potent drug cured Rachael’s acne – but Jon’s parents believe it drove him to suicide

- By Max Aitchison

IN December 2003, 22-yearold Jon Medland grew irritated by a collection of angry, red pimples decorating his shoulder blades. Topical creams, prescribed by his dermatolog­ist, added to the annoyance, staining his towels and bed sheets. Worse still, they didn’t work.

Eventually, Jon decided to opt for a stronger treatment and asked for a prescripti­on for Roaccutane — a potent drug known to obliterate the painful, stubborn spots seen in acne. By January 2004, the ‘spirited’ and ‘compassion­ate’ medical student was dead. Jon killed himself in his university room days after stopping a three-week course of the drug.

According to his father, Jonathan Medland, Jon’s death was the result of a sudden psychotic episode brought on by the medication.

‘Jon would be the last person in the world to have done such a thing,’ Jonathan, 63, said. ‘He never had a moment of loneliness or depression in his life. He came home from university for Christmas when he’d just started on the drug. He seemed not quite his normal, exuberant self, but there was certainly nothing to indicate what was about to happen.

‘He said, “Oh, yeah, my mate said they got a bit down on it. But I’ll be fine. I’ll be fine.” What happened a week later was just unthinkabl­e. We knew our son and there was nothing in his life that wasn’t perfect, other than a few spots on his back.’

Over the past two decades, several families have shared similar tragic stories. Most notably, in 1997 Seamus Todd, the 20-year-old son of the late Irish actor and Dam Busters star Richard Todd, shot himself at his family’s home. He had been taking Roaccutane, and his father publicly blamed it for his death.

In 1998, 18-year-old David Tebby from Wales, threw himself off a multi-storey car park after being prescribed a second course of the drug. A coroner said there was a ‘possibilit­y’ it played a role in his death. Then there was 28-year-old Angela Lee, from London, who, before taking her own life in 2008, left a note claiming Roaccutane had made her feel ‘there was no way out’, and 24-year-old Jesse Jones in 2011, who killed himself after two years of taking the drug on and off. A note Jesse left for his parents read: ‘Roaccutane seems to have changed the way my mind and body works in a big way. I can barely bring myself to type its name because I hate it so much.’

Today, multiple campaign groups, set up by the parents of those affected, speak of other, life-destroying psychologi­cal side effects. Some claim their children can no longer feel happiness, while others say they are blighted by recurrent panic attacks. Most are calling for an outright ban.

Despite this, dermatolog­ists have continued to prescribe it to patients with severe acne. So what is the truth – is Roaccutane safe?

Roaccutane, or isotretino­in as it is known in generic form, is an undoubtedl­y potent drug. The medicine, licensed in the early 1980s, uses high concentrat­ions of a Vitamin A derivative to dry out the sebaceous glands under the skin – those responsibl­e for producing the oil that clogs pores and causes spots. It also limits the production of keratin – the outer scales of the skin – which can also block pores, causing spots to form.

In short, it shuts off acne, which affects 80 per cent of people at some point in life, at its source. And it works phenomenal­ly well.

It improves skin in 90 per cent of cases and more than a third experience no relapse. Experts say its use is often undervalue­d, given the potentiall­y life-wrecking effects of acne.

While often considered a rite of passage for teenagers, a quarter of sufferers are adults. Severe acne can be debilitati­ng – causing agony, inflammati­on, bleeding and scarring. Dr Alia Ahmed, consultant dermatolog­ist at Barts NHS Trust in London, says: ‘Most people forget that acne isn’t a minor skin problem. It is actually very painful. It also causes embarrassm­ent and bodyanxiet­y issues.

‘It is far more likely that people who have severe acne will suffer all of these negative symptoms than them having a serious side effect from Roaccutane.’

And Dr Christophe­r Rowland Payne, consultant dermatolog­ist at The London Clinic, agrees, calling Roaccutane one of the great inventions of the post-war period.

‘Acne can be utterly disabling,’ he says. ‘Over the decades, Roaccutane has done an enormous amount of good for an incredible number of people.’

Prescribed by consultant dermatolog­ists as a last resort, the drug is thought, for these patients, to be worth its most common side effects, such as the drying out of the skin which can lead to cracked, bleeding skin, lips and nostrils, as well as thinning hair. Sometimes, if the dryness affects the eyes, vision can be impaired too. It is also known to cause birth defects, and strict pregnancy-prevention protocols are in place for women prescribed it.

Dr Emma Wedgeworth, a consultant dermatolog­ist and spokesman for the British Skin Foundation, describes the risk of the drug acting on the brain as ‘theoretica­l’, adding that large-scale studies have not suggested a link. ‘As far as we stand at the moment, the medical literature is not suggesting that there is a causal link,’ she says. ‘And it would be a

shame if Roaccutane was totally removed for the many millions of people that it has helped.’

It is a standpoint that is difficult to argue with. Far from ignoring the tragic stories, researcher­s have conducted multiple analyses into the mental-health impact of the drug over the years. Time and time again, they’ve failed to find a causal link.

In 2010, Swedish researcher­s tracked nearly 6,000 patients taking isotretino­in and found no cause and effect, concluding that any depressive symptoms were a result of lack of confidence due to the acne itself. Last year an analysis of 42 different studies – involving more than one million people – came to the same conclusion.

Other studies, whereby doctors have compared mental-health problems in acne patients taking Roaccutane, versus those taking other strong treatments such as antibiotic­s, have found similar levels of mental illness across both groups.

Some experts have suggested that the relentless reports of suicides may have unwittingl­y exacerbate­d the problem, providing a scapegoat for an otherwise unexplaine­d, tragic event, or leading patients to draw incorrect conclusion­s.

Dr Ahmed says: ‘I definitely think the negative experience­s receive far more press attention than the positive. Although I understand why – when something goes wrong, you’re more likely to tell people about it than if it goes right.’

Some suggest patients’ mental health problems pre-existed the drug – and acne patients are vulnerable to severe depression.

In a seminal paper, published in 1997, two dermatolog­ists analysed their patients’ mental wellbeing, over the course of 20 years. They noted that 16 had died by suicide, seven of whom had acne. Only two had been prescribed Roaccutane.

In another poll of dermatolog­ists, nearly 200 of their few thousand acne patients had attempted suicide, with 28 patients successful­ly taking their own life.

More recent research has found that at least one in five acne sufferers have considered suicide because of their poor skin, with other studies suggesting acne sufferers are 60 per cent more likely to have mentalheal­th problems, compared to healthy controls.

‘I’ve been a dermatolog­ist for over 30 years so I remember the world before Roaccutane. We had the most awful problems with scarring and depression,’ says Dr Rowland Payne.

Rachael Edmunds, a 32-year-old beauty therapist from Windsor, was medicated with anti-anxiety and antidepres­sant drugs last year, after struggling to leave the house because of her ‘angry’ acne. The mother-of-two has been blighted by the skin condition since the age of 13 and has had little success with creams and drugs prescribed by her dermatolog­ist.

‘It was agony. I’d wake up and my sheets would be bloody. I couldn’t hug people because the acne on my back was so inflamed.’

By the summer, she had slumped into a deep depression. ‘I didn’t leave the house,’ she says. ‘My husband had to do everything for me. I had to be put on antidepres­sants and anti-anxiety medication.’

In August, Rachael decided it was time to try the lastresort treatment – Roaccutane. ‘By that point I didn’t care what side effects I suffered,’ she says. ‘The first few weeks were a total breeze and I had no side effects. But by week three my lips started to dry and I would have at least two nose bleeds a day. In the second month I felt like my skin was on fire, really tight – it felt like I was sunburnt.’

Rachael noticed her depression worsen in month three, which she believes was related to the drug. She says: ‘I was almost like two different personalit­ies – one minute up and the next really low. I started to question whether I could keep taking it.’

But by October both her skin and her mood began to improve.

Having finished her course in January, Rachael believes it’s the best decision she has ever made. ‘Now I rarely wear make-up. It’s transforme­d me,’ she says.

But was Rachael just one of the lucky ones? What of those with no history of mental illness who find themselves gripped by a sudden psychotic episode? A small number of studies have suggested Roaccutane can alter chemical processes within the brain.

In 2005, researcher­s at Emory University in the US showed the drug reduces activity in the orbitofron­tal cortex, an area in the front of the brain known to be involved in symptoms of depression.

And in 2007, scientists at the University of Bath found that in mice it disrupted activity of serotonin – the ‘happy hormone’ – in brain areas responsibl­e for mood-regulation.

Erratic release of serotonin is linked to depression and schizophre­nia. But, crucially, scientists have found these brain changes did not predict mental health symptoms in Roaccutane patients.

Dermatolog­ists say disturbing reports will encourage patients not to take Roaccutane, refusing effective treatment that will, ultimately, benefit their mental health.

Dr Ahmed says: ‘We stop patients taking it at the first sign of a problem. But what worries me is that there may be somebody with really severe acne who would benefit from treatment but they’re afraid of taking it because of what they read, so suffer needlessly.’

■ For confidenti­al support, call the Samaritans on 116 123.

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 ??  ?? CLEARED UP: Rachael Edmunds with ‘agonising’ acne, top, and after a course of Roaccutane, above
CLEARED UP: Rachael Edmunds with ‘agonising’ acne, top, and after a course of Roaccutane, above
 ??  ?? GONE TOO SOON: Tragic student Jon Medland with his mother
GONE TOO SOON: Tragic student Jon Medland with his mother

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