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RIMADYL®
PRODUCT SAFETY ARTICLE
Carprofen
(Rimadyl) Freedom of Information Summary
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DOGS: Entire RIMADYL LAWSUIT & UPDATES
Article Below Reprinted with Permission:
From Wall Street Journal: March
13, 2000
Most
Arthritic Dogs Do Very Well On This Pill,
Except Ones That Die
By CHRIS
ADAMS
Staff Reporter
of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
Reprinted
with permission of the author
You
might call it a made-for-TV drug. Approved for human use
in the U.S. but not marketed that way, an arthritis medicine
called Rimadyl languished for nearly 10 years in developmental
limbo, then emerged in a surprising new form: Instead
of a human drug, it was now a drug for arthritic dogs.
And it became a hit.
With
the aid of slick commercials featuring once-lame dogs
bounding happily about, Rimadyl changed the way veterinarians
treated dogs. "Clients would walk in and say, 'What about
this Rimadyl?' " says George Siemering, who practices
in Springfield, Va.
Today, those
TV spots are gone. The reason has to do with dogs like
Montana.
A
six-year-old Siberian husky with stiff back legs, Montana
hobbled out of a vet's office in Brooklyn, N.Y., six months
ago accompanied by his human, Angela Giglio, and a supply
of Rimadyl pills. At first, the drug appeared to work.
But then Montana lost his appetite. He went limp, wobbling
instead of walking. Finally he didn't walk at all. He
ate leaves, vomited, had seizures and, eventually, was
put to sleep. An autopsy showed the sort of liver damage
associated with a bad drug reaction.
Pet
drugs are big business -- an estimated $3 billion world-wide
-- and Rimadyl is one of the bestsellers. It has been
given to more than four million dogs in the U.S. and more
abroad, brought Pfizer Inc. tens of
millions
of dollars in sales, and pleased many veterinarians and
dog owners. But the drug has also stirred a controversy,
with other pet owners complaining that nobody warned them
of its risks.
Montana's
owner, Ms. Giglio, is among them. After she informed Pfizer
and the Food and Drug administration of her relatively
youthful dog's death, Pfizer offered her $440 "as a gesture
of good will" and to cover part of the medical costs.
Insulted by the offer and a stipulation that she agree
to tell no one
about the
payment except her tax preparer, she refused to sign and
didn't take the money. "There's just no way in my conscience
or heart I can release them from blame," she says.
After
reports of bad reactions and deaths started streaming
in to the FDA, the agency suggested that Pfizer mention
"death" as a possible side effect in a warning letter
to vets, on labels and in TV ads. Pfizer eventually did
use the word with vets and on labels, but when
given an ultimatum about the commercials -- mention
"death" in the audio or end the ads -- Pfizer
chose to drop them.
Pfizer's
director of animal-products technical services, Edward
W. Kanara, says that when reports started coming in, "we
acted extremely promptly based on the information we had."
Pfizer points out that reported adverse events involve
less than 1% of treated dogs.
Since
Rimadyl's 1997 launch, the FDA has received reports of
about 1,000 dogs that died or were put to sleep and 7,000
more that had bad reactions after taking the drug, records
and official estimates indicate. The FDA says such events
are significantly underreported.
While
the numbers include cases "possibly" related to Rimadyl,
it is hard to be sure. Many dogs given the arthritis drug
are older, and few are autopsied after they die. Pfizer
says it analyzed cases of Rimadyl treated dogs that died
in 1998 and found a link to Rimadyl to be "likely" in
12% of cases and "not likely" in 22%; it says there was
too little information for a judgment about the others.
Still Approved
Despite
these problems, the FDA says Rimadyl deserves to be on
the market, provided vets take the proper precautions.
These include advising dog owners what bad reactions to
watch for and periodically doing liver-function or other
lab tests.
Within
a few weeks, Pfizer will begin affixing a safety sheet
directly to packages of Rimadyl pills. It is the first
time either FDA officials or Pfizer can recall such a
step being taken in the world of animal drugs.
Rimadyl
-- generically carprofen -- is an anti-inflammatory medicine.
Developer Roche Laboratories expected to market it for
people in 1988 and received FDA approval, but shelved
the plan after concluding the market for such drugs was
too crowded. In addition, some outside experts expressed
concerns; a commentary in a pharmaceutical journal noted
unusual liver-function readings in 14% to 20% of test
subjects and opined that "until additional data on carprofen
are available, older compounds should probably be tried
initially."
The
idea of switching the product to the animal-drug track
soon arose. A couple of corporate transactions later,
it ended up in the hands of Pfizer's animal-drug unit.
There,
it was treated to the kind of sophisticated marketing
Pfizer does well. A survey of 885 dog owners was done.
Besides shedding light on favorite dog names (Jake, Ginger,
Lady), the poll revealed that one-fifth of dog owners
would be willing to spend "whatever it took" to buy an
aging dog an extra year or two of life. No fewer than
53% agreed that "my dog is a better companion than other
members of my family."
The
FDA requires safety and efficacy testing for animal drugs
just as for human ones, but animal-drug tests are smaller.
Pfizer says about 500 dogs got Rimadyl in various trials,
which is no more than a fifth of the number of subjects
in comparable human-drug trials. Some dogs showed unusual
liver-function readings and one young beagle on a high
dose died, but for the most part, the FDA and Pfizer didn't
find side effects alarming. The drug was approved for
an early-1997 launch.
That
same year, the FDA made it easier to market drugs directly
to consumers on TV. Soon, Pfizer was running commercials
in which a once-stiff yellow Labrador retriever named
Lady bounded over a fallen tree as she fetched tennis
balls beside a lake. In another ad, a dog leapt through
a window and slid down a banister.
There
were also full-page magazine ads and a public-relations
campaign, whose results, the PR firm later said, included
1,785 print stories, 856 radio reports and 245 TV news
reports "generating 25.5 million positive impressions
on the product."
Early
on, vets were floored by the drug's effects. "The results
in some cases have been pretty darn close to miraculous,"
says David Whitten of the Hilldale Veterinary Hospital
in Southfield, Mich. "I'm using this drug on my own dog.
It has been effective. But as with all medications, side
effects are certainly a problem."
The First
Complaints
Indeed,
within months of the launch, vets at Colorado State University
in Fort Collins noticed troubling reactions. Labrador
retrievers seemed particularly affected. Since the safety
studies for Rimadyl had emphasized testing on young beagles,
Pfizer went back to conduct another, small test just on
Labs; it says that test showed no particular problem.
Bill
Keller, an FDA veterinary-medicine official, notes that
"any time you take a product from the investigation and
put it into actual practice, you're going to see things
you didn't expect." But reports about Rimadyl came in
by the hundreds. The FDA had received just over 3,000
animal-drug bad-reaction
reports
in 1996, the year before Rimadyl's launch; in 1998, the
drug's first full year, Rimadyl alone produced more than
that many.
They
swamped the FDA's tiny Center for Veterinary Medicine
in Rockville, Md. Pfizer was scrambling as well. "Basically,
their response," says Dr. Keller, "was 'Tell us what you
want us to do. We love the fact that it's selling so well,
but we don't know what to do with all these adverse reactions.'
"
The
FDA and Pfizer discussed a "Dear Doctor" letter to be
sent to vets. FDA records show the agency found parts
of an early Pfizer draft "unacceptable as they are promotional
in tone... ." It was revised.
The
records also show Pfizer disagreed with the FDA's suggestion
that the letter cite "death" as a possible side effect.
To get the letter out, the FDA told Pfizer it was "agreeing
to your exclusion of the 'death' syndrome from the letter
at this time. However, we will revisit the 'death' syndrome
issue and other potential side effects for possible inclusion
in labeling at a later date." So the term didn't appear
in the first warning Pfizer sent, in mid-1997.
Clear Benefits
Meanwhile,
dog owners were asking for Rimadyl. "It was their advertising
that sold me on the drug," says Michelle Walsh, a Phoenix
woman who says her miniature schnauzer was given it and
later died.
Not
that vets needed much convincing. They saw clear benefits
from the drug. On top of that, they could get points from
Pfizer for each Rimadyl purchase they made; points were
redeemable for PalmPilots, Zip drives for PCs and other
equipment.
Although
Pfizer's letter told vets to explain to owners the signs
of a bad reaction to Rimadyl, such as vomiting, lethargy
or diarrhea, it is evident that a great many didn't. The
FDA's Dr. Keller says, "There are a lot of veterinarians
who don't think they need to take the time, or who forget,
or for whatever reason are not providing animal owners
with this information."
Donna
Allen, whose chow-mix, Maggie, started on Rimadyl last
summer, says, "All my vet did was give me this little
bag of pills, with no information." She says Maggie "didn't
want to take it, but I made her."
After
four weeks, Maggie began to vomit violently, Ms. Allen
says. The dog vanished from their home outside Birmingham,
Ala., and later was found lying in a ditch. Ms. Allen
loaded her into a truck and sped 35 miles to a veterinary
clinic, but the five-year-old dog died. Her vet wouldn't
implicate Rimadyl in the death until Ms. Allen urged him
to send the dog's internal organs to the University of
Illinois vet school, where an examination showed liver
toxicity.
Maggie
was buried under a marker adorned with the figure of an
angel. And Ms. Allen took to the streets, delivering a
letter to all the vets in the area urging them to "understand
that Rimadyl helps certain dogs, but it is poison to other
dogs."
The D-Word
As
the complaints poured in, the FDA told Pfizer it would
have to revisit the label issue. Pfizer had referred to
"fatal outcomes" on the label as a possible effect of
the drug class to which Rimadyl belonged, but not
specifically
of this drug. Now the agency asked that Pfizer cite "death"
prominently as a possible side effect of the drug. Describing
the back and forth with Pfizer, the FDA's Dr. Keller says,
"They did it. They weren't
enthusiastic
about it, but they have always been cooperative. And that's
part of the nature of the game we play with industry."
But
the FDA also wanted the word "death" in the audio of commercials.
Pfizer indicated this "would be devastating to the product,"
FDA minutes of a February 1999 meeting show. A company
spokesman says that "putting 'death' on a 30-second commercial
and in proper context was something we didn't think
was possible."
Rather than do so, it eventually pulled the commercials.
Pfizer
says it now will do traditional marketing to vets, making
sure they know the proper way to use the drug. Another
"Dear Doctor" letter will soon go out, and the company
will start attaching a safety sheet to pill packages.
Pfizer
acknowledges it has a perception problem with some dog
owners; a consumer group, for instance, has mounted a
campaign dubbed BARKS, for Be Aware of Rimadyl's Known
Side-effects. The company is contacting dog owners who
have told their stories on the Internet, and it is offering
to pay medical and diagnostic expenses for some dogs who
may have been harmed by Rimadyl.
But
Pfizer stands firmly behind the value of the drug, of
which it says sales have continued to grow. Most vets
also remain strongly behind Rimadyl. Owners, too, generally
say they think the drug is important -- they just want
to know the risks.
Atlantan
Roger Williams gave his mixed-breed terrier, William,
Rimadyl for more than a year and believes it contributed
to the dog's death. "But if I had to do it all over, I
would give my dog Rimadyl again," he says. "The difference
is I would have known what to expect. Without Rimadyl,
William was miserable. And what's the point of living
another three years if you're miserable?"
Write to
Chris Adams at chris.adams@wsj.com