David Franklin poses for a picture in Hopkinton, Mass., Friday, April 20, 2007. In 2004, Pfizer paid $430 million in fines to settle allegations it marketed the epilepsy drug Neurontin for pain and psychiatric illnesses. Franklin, a medical liaison who became a whistleblower against the company, said that even after the settlement _ one of the largest ever in a health care fraud case _ doctors told him that other pharmaceutical companies were still actively promoting their drugs for off-label uses.
Stephan Savoia / AP
David Franklin, who became a whistleblower in the first Neurontin case.
HEALTH

Pfizer’s Headache

Lawsuit charges drugmaker was deceptive about Neurontin.

 
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After it paid $430 million to settle a 2004 lawsuit over illegal promotion of its anti-seizure drug Neurontin, Pfizer, the world's largest pharmaceutical company, may have thought its legal troubles with that medication were over. Not so fast: A new lawsuit, brought by the same attorney, alleges that the company's misdeeds went much further than originally charged. According to newly unsealed court documents, not only did the company and its subsidiaries push Neurontin for unapproved uses—the practice at the center of the first suit, which Pfizer admitted to as part of its settlement—they did so knowing that the drug was ineffective for several of those conditions (the settlement involved allegations of both criminal and civil violations). Pfizer, according to the documents, engaged in "outright deception of the biomedical community, and suppression of scientific truth"—stalling or stopping the publication of negative study results; manipulating both trial designs and data to make the drug look more effective than it was; and using questionable tactics to enhance the drug's image and increase its sales.

These practices were "highly unethical, harmful to science, wasteful of public resources, and potentially dangerous to the public's health," writes Kay Dickersin, the author of the longest of the documents and the director of the Center for Clinical Trials at Johns Hopkins University.

On Tuesday, Pfizer released a statement saying that it was "committed to the communication of medically or scientifically significant results of all studies, regardless of outcome. Company policy requires that, in all cases, study results are reported by Pfizer in an objective, accurate, balanced, and complete manner with a discussion of the strengths and limitations of the study, and are reported regardless of the outcome of the study."

The lawsuit is in early stages; Boston attorney Thomas Greene (who represented David Franklin, the whistleblower in the first Neurontin case) is seeking permission to bring it as a class-action case. Judge Patti Saris rejected a request to that effect in August, but at the time, says Greene, she had not seen 12 expert reports that now comprise the bulk of the argument against the company. The reports, written by a wide variety of respected academics and submitted to the judge as part of the complaint, cite provocative emails sent by employees of Pfizer and its subsidiaries. They also analyze studies, both published and unpublished, that the company commissioned to test Neurontin's effectiveness at treating four conditions for which it is not approved: nociceptive pain ("think, 'I just hit my finger with a hammer,'" says Greene), bipolar disorder, migraines and headaches, and neuropathic pain, a chronic condition resulting from an injury to the nervous system. A final report concludes that Pfizer encouraged doctors to prescribe Neurontin at higher doses than those approved by the FDA.

In the case of nociceptive pain, the documents suggest a simple pattern of misbehavior: commissioning tests but declining to publish results that showed the drug did not work. The documents list several randomized controlled trials of Neurontin for this acute form of pain. All were commissioned by Pfizer, all turned out negative, and none were ever published in journals.

With bipolar disorder, the documents are not as straightforward. Dickersin's report analyzed all the relevant studies of Neurontin and says they were "marked by extensive spin and misrepresentation of data." Some of the negative ones were published, but only after long delays. Others were published but not cited in marketing literature. According to one of the most comprehensive of the 12 lawsuit reports, by John Abramson, a clinical instructor at Harvard Medical School, Pfizer emphasized studies of low quality that were "not blinded, not randomized, and not controlled." Meanwhile, it says, three double-blind randomized controlled trials—studies performed to the highest possible standard—had shown that Neurontin was in fact no better at treating the condition than a placebo was.

 
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Member Comments
  • Posted By: qzw890 @ 10/20/2008 3:07:51 PM

    Comment: I have been on a fairly high dose of Neurontin for 8 years. It has been a life-saver for me. Because of the pain and sensations I experience, even when I have missed a dose by a couple of hours, there is no doubt in my mind that I would have commited suicide by now. I even worry more about running out of it than I do the opiate that I take for the condition. I am not saying that there might not be problems with the way Pfizer handled the trials and reporting, but I can tell you by personal experince that IT DOES work for neuropathic pain. I would testify in any courtroom to its effectiveness; at least for my condition which resulted from a broken ankle after a fall at work.

  • Posted By: swillden @ 10/14/2008 7:08:47 PM

    Comment: I have just been prescribed Neurotin and have been on it for ten days. I have diabetes and was waking up nightly to horribly itchy burning feet. I had tried Lyrica in the past and although I liked the relief of symptoms I didn't like the total zombie it turned me into. My neurologist prescribed Neurontin and Requip in combination for my foot neuropathy and restless leg syndrome and I am actually able to sleep at night. YEAH! I hate taking six more pills every day but it HELPS and it is working!

  • Posted By: phoebecash @ 10/11/2008 12:53:09 PM

    Comment: In 1989 I had a radical hysterectomy for cancer. little did I know It would cause other problems. such as permanent nerve damage and neuralgia. I went to Doctors for 12 years with no results. All that time I took pain mediucation and it still didn't control my pain. I would lose 2 and 3 days every couple months to such severe pain that I would be in bed or the hospital;. One time I took 12 pain pills in a 13 hour period and still ended up in the hospital getting shot up with 50mg of demerol. I would end up in the hospital every 2 to 3 months because of hte pain. I got to be on a first name basis with the ER doctor. He would see me and shoot me up immediately and then we would run all kinds of tests. I finally switched to my husbands Doctor and we tried different things such as prozac and sertraline and others. we tried to go with out pain killers. It didn't work. He sent me to a pain management clinic where after the first visit they diagnosised me with neuralgia and started trigger point injections. They are supposed to last for 30 days, I could even make 3 weeks. After 3 tries we went to medications. no pain killers because I was tired of losing days of my life to them. We tried Neurontin and I was up to 15 capsules a day. I did this therapy for a couple of years when I saw a report about the Wellbutrin SR. I went to my doctor with it and we gradually weaned the neurontin down to one a day with one Wellbutrin a day. I did this for years. I am 51 and no longer take the medicine. I can say if it hadn't been for neurontin I dodn't know where I would be today. That drug saved me. The reason I went to my doctor is because I wanted to get away from taking so much medicine. I hate to take medicine. i never had a problem with the drug, but everyone is different. What works for one person doesn't work for everyone. I know that drug companies are devious and will do anything to get Doctors to use their product. I worked in pharmacies for over 20 years and saw first hand their lies and games. Anything for the bottom line. The sad part is that they hurt alot of people in the process.

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