Re: Lawsuit questions need for Lipitor: The ASCOT trial's 2000 women
- From: "MEM, MD" <mem2y@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 13 Oct 2005 00:48:31 GMT
David,
I was going to respond on this one but you summed it up far better
than I could have. Just to amplify your point, Prove-It demonstrated
at least as big a benefit of post-ACS hi-dose statins in women as in
men.
On Wed, 12 Oct 2005 20:24:50 -0400, David Rind
<drind@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>fresh~horses wrote:
>> The study refererenced in Roni Rabin's Newsday article at the head of
>> this thread ("...2000 women...") is ASCOT, published in Lancet in April
>> 2003.
>>
>> And here is an snippet regarding the lawsuit, with the lawsuit website
>> linked below.
>>
>> David if you want the table for the ASCOT trial I can e-mail it as
>> attachment.
>>
>> MEM do you have a workable address? Anyone wants it say so on group,
>> please. Despammed is defunct.
>>
>>
>> Zee
>>
>> "Although Lipitor has been on the market since 1996,
>> it wasn't approved for the prevention of heart attacks
>> until 2004. The FDA approved it for this because a
>> large study (called the "ASCOT" study) showed that there
>> was a reduction in heart attacks overall for the
>> approximately 10,000 patients in that study. However, the
>> FDA looked at this study as a whole, rather than
>> looking at the different types of patients in the study. In
>> fact, the women in that study who had no prior history
>> of heart disease who took Lipitor actually had 10%
>> more heart attacks than the 1,000 women taking a placebo.
>> Despite the fact that the FDA approved Lipitor for
>> prevention of heart attacks, there is still no reliable
>> medical evidence that Lipitor or any other statin is
>> effective at preventing heart attacks for women and
>> people over 65, who have no history of heart disease."
>
>Okay, it probably should have occurred to me that this was from ASCOT-LLA.
>
>First a philosophical comment about looking at subgroup analyses: they
>are usually a bad idea. This applies both in negative studies where
>pharmaceutical companies try to find a subgroup the drug worked in, and
>positive studies where doubters try to find a subgroup the drug failed in.
>
>In general, a therapy that works in one group has simlar relative
>effects in all groups. There are exceptions, but this should be the
>default expectation. If I show you a study demonstrating that statins
>work in people, and you are short, left-handed, and have brown hair,
>it's not generally reasonable to expect that I prove to you that the
>study also showed benefit in short, left-handed, brunettes. In the
>absence of strong evidence to the contrary, the relative benefit should
>be assumed to be the same as in everyone else. By chance alone, when we
>start performing subset analyses we will find groups where a proven
>treatment appears not to work and where a useless treatment appears to work.
>
>The default assumption, in the absence of strong evidence to the
>contrary, should be that statins (and blood pressure medicines, and
>antibiotics, and vitamins) have the same relative effects in men and
>women. Note, by the way, that this does not apply to differences in
>absolute benefit -- women, on average, are at lower risk for coronary
>heart disease than men, and so, on average, will get less absolute
>benefit from statins than men. But we should expect that women have the
>same relative benefit and that a woman who happened to be at baseline
>high risk would have the same absolute benefit as a man with the same
>baseline high risk.
>
>This should even be the default assumption when a subgroup analysis
>appears to show a statistically different effect in one subgroup from
>another -- the likelihood of this being due to chance remains high if
>the study performed lots of subgroup analyses. However, this was not the
>case in ASCOT. ASCOT found no statistically significant difference in
>the effect of statins in men and women and so looking at the individual
>subgroups is particularly suspect.
>
>Second, ASCOT actually provided almost no data at all on the effects of
>statins in women. The comment quoted above about a 10% increase in
>events in women is just the sort of disingenous language that one might
>expect from a pharmaceutical company trashing a competitor's product or
>from someone with a stake in the outcome ignoring the actual evidence
>(not that one could ever imagine a litigator doing such a thing).
>
>There were thirty-six primary outcome events in women in ASCOT --
>THIRTY-SIX! Nineteen occurred in women taking atorvastatin and 17 in
>women taking placebo. Those two events out of 17 represent the 10%
>increase the article is apparently referring to. To say that this was
>not statistically significant and that the confidence intervals were
>wide doesn't begin to address how silly it is to make any conclusions
>about a differential effect of statins in men and women based on ASCOT.
>
>We have evidence from other studies with more events, by the way, that
>statins really do seem to have the same relative benefits in men and
>women just as we would have expected had we never bothered to look.
>
>So, when the author of the quote above writes that the FDA "looked at
>the study as a whole, rather than looking at the different types of
>patients in the study", the response should be that indeed that's what
>the FDA did, and they did exactly the right thing.
.
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