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The Vioxx Clinical Studies - Evidence That Vioxx
Is Associated with an Increased Incidence of Heart
Attack, Stroke and Other Cardiovascular Events.
The public is generally aware that Merck & Co. has recently "recalled" or withdrawn Vioxx from the market and that the manufacturer explained its withdrawal as based upon a recent study which demonstrated an increased incidence of heart attacks in association with Viroxx use.
This most recent finding of the increased incidence of heart attacks, strokes and other adverse reactions with Viroxx use was not the first. Previous studies had demonstrated the same as early as March 2000. And the same findings, of heart attack, stroke, incresed incidence of blood clots and other mostly cardiovascular adverse events were published in a peer review journal in August 2001.
Indeed, long before the most recent study, the FDA had warned Merck that its advertising was false and misleading, specifically for its failure to warn the consumer of the findings of increased incidence of heart attack. And although Merck was urged to do good safety studies to determine the extent of danger posed by Vioxx, this most recent "discovery" that its drug caused heart attacks and other adverse reactions was made in an efficacy study, a study designed to test the utility of Viroxx in the treatment of colon polyps. The study had to be aborted, and the investigational subjects removed from Vioxx treatment when it was determined statistically that they were at a substantially increased likelyhood of heart attack.
The equally important studies, not discussed in Merck's anouncement, were the March 2000 VIGOR (Vioxx Gastrointestinal Outcomes Research) study, and the August 2001 Cleveland Clinic Heart Center study.
Each of these studies demonstates an incresed incidence of heart attacks, strokes and other cardiovascular events in association with Vioxx. In the authors' estimation
the studies support the proposition that Merck
culpably failed earlier to withdraw the drug from the market. .The Cleveland Clinic Heart Center
study was published in the peer reviewed Journal of
the American Medical Association in 2001, based upon
data compiled in four previous clinical trials of
Vioxx (and Celebrex, a similar drug) involving 18,064
patients. (Vioxx belongs to a category of COX-2 selective,
nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug [NSAIDS]. Celebrex
[celecoxib] is another COX-2 selective NSAID.)
Prior to the publication of the Cleveland study the
data obtained in the March 2000 VIGOR (Vioxx Gastrointestinal
Outcomes Research) study also found an increased risk
of cardiovascular events in Vioxx users as compared
the incidence of cardiovascular events for users of
another pain drug. In Merck's VIGOR study, comparing
Vioxx with naproxen, a highly statistically significant
five-fold increase in heart attacks was demonstrated
in the overall Vioxx group, 0.5 percent compared to
0.1 percent in the naproxen group. This amounted to
20 heart attacks in the Vioxx users (out of 4,047
patients) compared with four in the naproxen users
(out of 4,029 patients). This increased number of
heart attacks was also accompanied by an increase
in other thrombotic (blood clotting) adverse effects
such as strokes and blood clots in the legs as well
as problems with hypertension in the Vioxx group
compared with the naproxen group.
In September 2001, the American Heart Association,
the National Stroke Association and the Arthritis
Foundation asked Merck to test whether Vioxx increased
the risk of heart attack and stroke. In September,
2002, FDA sent Merck a warning letter asserting that
the advertising for Vioxx was misleading. The warning
letter was sent to Merck President and CEO Raymond
V. Gilmartin, stating:
"You have engaged in a promotional campaign for
Vioxx that minimizes the potentially serious cardiovascular
findings that were observed in the Vioxx Gastrointestinal
Outcomes Research (VIGOR) study, and thus, misrepresents
the safety profile for Vioxx. Specifically, your promotional
campaign discounts the fact that in the VIGOR study,
patients on Vioxx were observed to have a four to
five fold increase in myocardial infarctions (MIs)
compared to patients on the comparator nonsteroidal
anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID), Naprosyn (naproxen)."
Merke subsequently changed its advertising to list "heart attack" in the middle of a dozen
infrequent Viroxx "side effects," however,
without mention of the other adverse reactions, including
stroke, also found to be associated with Vioxx use
in the VIGOR and Cleveland studies.
The Merck withdrawal of Vioxx, according to the company's
press release, was based on adverse data from a recent
placebo controlled efficacy study to determine whether
VIOXX was efficacious in preventing the recurrence
of colon polyps.. That study was stopped after the
investigators determined that the data demonstrated
that the human subjects taking VIOXX had an increased
risk for confirmed cardiovascular events, including
heart attack and stroke over those who were receiving
the placebo.
In the authors' view, the Vioxx clinical
studies are important evidence to demonstrate that
Vioxx users who suffered heart attacks in particular,
as well as stroke and the other adverse reactions, may have viable causes
of action against Merck. In addition,
the evidence suggests that Merck may have deliberately
turned a blind eye to the mounting evidence of Vioxx
adverse reaction data, failing to respond to the pleas
of the American Heart Association and Arthritis Foundation,
and falsely advertised Vioxx, as implied also by the
FDA warning letter.
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