Zantac Lawsuit


Researching drug company and regulatory malfeasance for over 16 years
Humanist, humorist
Showing posts with label teratogen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label teratogen. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 16, 2014

New Study Uncovers Paxil's Hidden Toxicity





As if we didn't know already (as if Glaxo didn't know all those years ago)

A new study carried out by the University of Utah has revealed what Glaxo have been hiding from the public for many years. The only people that really know the truth are the US Courts where information has been suppressed as part of settlement agreements made between Glaxo and Plaintiff lawyers.

In a nutshell, GSK attorneys come to a compromise when their case defending Paxil goes pear-shaped. They, of course, use all the tools at their disposal - the statute of limitations, whether or not a fetus is viable, ie, whether or not it can be regarded as a human at the time it was aborted - they also use many other points of law to defend their toxic blockbuster drug.

According to Neurotoxicology and Teratology, Volume 47, January–February 2015, mice exposed during development experienced a multitude of problems: males weighed less, had fewer offspring, dominated fewer territories and died at a higher rate. Females took longer to produce their first litters, had fewer pups and pups that were underweight.

The Paxil doses were relatively close to those prescribed for people.

In the study, researchers gave food laced with Paxil to 20 breeding pairs of mice for several weeks, until all had produced up to four litters. The offspring also ate Paxil-laced chow until they reached breeding age.

This from Newswise...


Researchers then released the exposed offspring into the competitive arena with the offspring of a control group of mice never exposed to Paxil. Groups consisted of eight males and 14 to 16 females, creating population densities comparable to those seen in the wild. The researchers started five such populations and kept them going for six months.
Males exposed to Paxil were about half as likely to control a territory. They also lagged behind control males in body weight throughout the weeks of competition and were more likely to die. Exposed males produced 44 percent fewer offspring. Exposed females showed no significant weight or mortality differences, but they produced half as many offspring as control females at the initial assessment. Their fecundity rebounded at later time points.

Are we surprised anymore?

Question is... Why has it taken so long for such a study to be carried out? In truth, it hasn't.

Here's a bit of history...

3-year-old Lyam Kilker was born with serious heart defects. While pregnant, Kilker's mother took the antidepressant paroxetine [Paxil]. The Jury's decision in this case was that Paxil was the causation of Lyam Kilker being born with heart defects. In other words, Paxil was deemed responsible as the agent that disturbed the development of an embryo or fetus.


The following was taken from the court transcript in the Kilker v GlaxoSmithKline trial. [Verbatim]

"In May of this year, 2009, a study was published by Doctor Sloot. The study said this.
"What Doctor Sloot did is, he took Paxil and all the other reuptake inhibitors and he exposed rat fetuses to these 12 different drugs, including Paxil. And what Shearing Plough was trying to figure out, what they were trying to do was figure out whether one of the drugs that they were going to put on the market to compete with GSK's drug was capable of causing birth defects. And so they took the drug they were going to take to market, and before they took it to market, they did this test. And they compared it to all the other SSRIs. Because, as you will learn, GSK never did this test.
"What Doctor Sloot discovered in May of this year is that out of all the teratogen, out of all the SSRIs, the 12, only one was a clear teratogen, Paxil. He discovered that Paxil in May of this year was actually more powerful a teratogen than cocaine.
"It would be safer, according to Doctor Sloot's study, to take cocaine than it would be to take Paxil while you were pregnant.
"Now, Shearing Plough, quite rightly, took their drug that they were thinking about taking to market to compete with Paxil, and even though it was just a possible teratogen, they scrapped their plans to take it to market and decided the risk was not worth the benefit."

Upon this revelation I emailed both Glaxo and the British drug regulator, the MHRA. All of that correspondence is featured in my book, The evidence, however, is clear, the Seroxat scandal. For those of you that don't have a copy there's an extract featuring that correspondence here.

No doubt medicine regulators around the globe will raise an eyebrow at the latest study by the University of Utah, they may shuffle uncomfortably... then ignore the findings. That's my experience of regulators. Quite why they are called regulators baffles me.

Paxil is just one example of a pill causing birth defects, there are many more, much of which are dished out to women because they have some form of dangerous depression during their pregnancy, a depression, that we are told, if left untreated can be passed on to the fetus.

Genius marketing folks...with the sole aim of making money...and lots of it.

Bob Fiddaman.

Related

Ryan, Glaxo's Non-Viable Fetus - Part I

Ryan, Glaxo's Non-Viable Fetus - Part II - The Twists








Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Paxil May Promote Breast Cancer



So, we know about Paxil and it's propensity to increase suicidal thoughts, we know it is a teratogen and has caused birth defects, we know that it has been the cause of completed suicides, we know that it causes severe withdrawal for many that try to come off it.

Surely we know all there is to know about Glaxo's toxic wonder drug? Apparently not.

A new study has identified paroxetine as having a weak estrogenic effect, which could promote breast cancer in women.

Don't you just love the folk over at GSK, what's the chances that they knew about this link and sat on it?

The Los Angeles Times ran the story yesterday.

Melissa Healy writes...

A team of researchers from the City of Hope in Duarte has developed a speedy way to identify drugs and chemicals that can disrupt the balance of sex hormones in human beings and influence the development and progress of diseases such as breast cancer.
In a trial screening of 446 drugs in wide circulation, the new assay singled out the popular antidepressant paroxetine (better known by its commercial name, Paxil) as having a weak estrogenic effect that could promote the development and growth of breast tumors in women.
Last summer, the Food and Drug Administration approved the marketing of a low dose of paroxetine  repackaged under the commercial name Brisdelle  as a nonhormonal treatment for hot flashes and other menopausal symptoms.

For more about the Paxil in disguise, Brisdelle, read Shionogi to Co-Promote Paroxetine Use in Menopausal Women

Nothing really surprises me anymore about Paxil. The only thing that really astounds me is that it's still being given a clean bill of health by drug regulators around the world. Mind you, when you learn that the drug regualtors are actually funded by the pharmaceutical industry it really shouldn't surprise anyone.

It's all about making money folks. So what if men, women and children kill themselves, so what if babies are born with limbs missing, so what if women are forced to abort their deformed children, so what if it causes horrific withdrawal problems...so what it it increases a woman's chance of developing breast cancer.

GlaxoSmithKline's corporate tagline is... GlaxoSmithKline is a global healthcare company that is committed to helping people to do more, feel better and live longer.

The British drug regulator, the MHRA, also have a laughable tagline... We protect and improve the health of millions of people every day through the effective regulation of medicines and medical devices, underpinned by science and research.

One word, four syllables.

Pharmafia.


Bob Fiddaman

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Pharmaceutical Intensive Care

SSRi use during pregnancy




What is Intensive Care?

Intensive care units (ICU), also called critical care or intensive therapy departments, are sections within a hospital that look after patients whose conditions are life-threatening and need constant, close monitoring and support from equipment and medication to keep normal body functions going. [1]

The British flagship programme Panorama is stirring the pot again, this time, it seems, it's siding with those who warn against the use of SSRi type medications in pregnant mothers.

Good for them.

I've highlighted SSRi birth defects on this blog many times, particularly paroxetine birth defects. It now seems a given that paroxetine, commonly known as Seroxat in the UK, Paxil in the states and Aropax in the Southern Hemisphere, can cause birth defects. But what about the other group of SSRis?



We, as consumers, constantly hear that the jury is out on their safety during pregancy and that doctors have to weigh up the risk/benefit ratio before prescribing.

This is classic pharmaceutical deflection and, dare I say it, medicine regulator deflection too.

Who is ultimately responsible here, the pharmaceutical company that make the product that can harm unborn children, the limp-wristed regulators who are supposed to regulate the drugs consumers take or the doctors who prescribe the drugs?

Personally, I believe it's the manufacturer who should be held accountable, there are many who take a different viewpoint, all valid views I might add.

Let's say you have fallen pregnant and you are feeling down. You go to your doctor and he, after apparently weighing up the risk/benefit offers you an antidepressant from the SSRi family. He tells you that untreated depression may harm your child and using an SSRi will therefore work to protect the child.

It's ridiculous when you think about that kind of statement. Its a statement that ignores the fact that 'depression' (sadness arising from negative life events or circumstances) can be treated by addressing the social factors causing it rather than by prescribing drugs that cause birth defects.

Let's say our subject is depressed because her employers have told her that there are going to be job cuts. She, like most, would worry. Because she is pregnant she'd probably worry more. How can I now afford to look after my child?

Pharmaceutical companies, regulators and doctors will have you believe that our subject is passing on her concerns to her unborn child. It's the selling point and one that is cruel and heartless. I don't think there is any doubt that having a mother who is scared, stressed, sad etc has a negative impact on a baby but surely that suggests doctors should be providing support to remove or cope with the stressors not prescribing drugs that they do not deny carry a risk. There are no risks associated with joining a new mothers coffee group, getting budget advice, seeking the support of friends, family or social service organisations and if the root causes of the distress are dealt with, huge benefits for both mother and baby. This approach surely has a better risk/benefit profile than prescribing antidepressants but of course doesn't come with the rewards to doctors from big pharma that prescribing does. Nor is it able to be provided in a 15 minute appointment which maximises profit for the doctor's business.

BBC Panorama spoke to eight mothers whose babies came into this world with serious heart defects. All eight mothers were taking SSRi medication during the course of their pregnancy. We are expected to believe that this is just a coincidence.

Babies are born with defects all the time and this really has nothing to do with what the mothers ingest... unless of course the mothers have been smoking, drinking alcohol or taking illegal substances during their term.

Yup, blame everything but the drug that is prescribed widely, right?

So, let's assume that our subject weighs up the risk/benefits herself and decides that taking an SSRi would increase the risk to her unborn child. But our subject is a smoker and want to quit... she has tried many times but just can't kick the habit.

Her doctor, once again, has a drug that can help her. Once again he has to weigh up the risk against the benefits. Chantix [also known as Champix] can, according to its manufacturer Pfizer, help anyone quit smoking. Zyban [also known as Wellbutrin] can, according to its manufacturers, GlaxoSmithKline, also help you quit smoking.

Your unborn child is, women are told, more at risk if you continue to smoke. This maybe true but both Chantix and Zyban, the latter being an antidepressant rebadged by GlaxoSmithKline, can also cause serious abnormalities in babies.

So, where do the regulators come in?

The UK medicines regulator, the MHRA, made recommendations back in early 2000 that SSRis should not be prescribed to children or teenagers. They did this because they had reviewed the evidence and found that there was no benefit in this population taking SSRis. In fact the evidence showed that there was an increased risk of suicidal thinking while this age group was taking an SSRi.

Now, I'm not suggesting that unborn children can have suicidal thoughts but if a drug can induce such chemical changes in the living then are we expected to believe that it will make no alterations to a child growing inside its mother?

The MHRA can and will tell us that they have played their part. They have issued the warnings to the prescribing physicians.

Analogy

"Hey kids, don't touch that fence, it has electricity running through it", the man on top of the grassy bank tells the children.

"Don't believe you", Simon tells the man.

Simon touches the fence. Many volts of electricity are passed through his body. Simon dies as a result of his injuries.

8 days later...

"Hey kids, don't touch that fence, it has electricity running through it", the same man on top of the grassy bank tells the children.

"Don't believe you", Julie tells the man.

Julie touches the fence. Many volts of electricity are passed through her body. Julie dies as a result of her injuries.

The man stands from his sitting position. He's satisfied and has no conscience, he did, after all, warn of the dangers.

Would a humanistic more active approach to protecting the lives of these children have been called for here?

Should the man have raised alarm, been more vocal, called the relevant authorities or maybe erected warning signs in clear bold text, "THIS FENCE IS ELECTRIC". Might warning parents that the fence was dangerous and urging them to monitor their children closely when in proximity to it have been warranted?

The man had been sitting on the grassy bank for many months. In total he had witnessed 5 children touch the fence. Only two of those 5 had died as a result of their injuries. The other three suffered burns but lived as a result.

Because of this the man decided that more people who touched the fence survived than those who died and the fence was therefore not a risk to children.

Bizarre way of thinking, right?

But this is the exact logic that regulators are using when it comes to mothers taking antidepressants during pregnancy. Moreover, they are passing the buck and allowing doctors to make the call.

Let's just take a look at a recent birth defect trial in the United States. The decision of which found GlaxoSmithKline guilty.

When the verdict was announced I contacted the MHRA and asked if they were going to change the labelling on Seroxat now that evidence had emerged that it was a clear teratogen [2]. They told me they were not. I wrote a whole chapter about this in my book where I produce the email correspondence between myself and MHRA CEO, Kent Woods [3]

Here's an extract from court documents [Kilker Vs GlaxoSmithKline]

September 15, 2009
13 Courtroom 253, City Hall
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Sean Tracey of the Tracey Law Firm [Attorney for Kilker]
Glaxo were represented, as usual, by King & Spalding


MR. TRACEY: May it please the Court, good morning.
JURORS: Good morning.
MR. TRACEY: I am going to reintroduce myself. My name is Sean Tracey. I represent Michelle David and Lyam Kilker. Before I begin, I want to reintroduce to you Jamie Sheller here, and there are a couple young lawyers up front here. Scott Love and Adam Peavy you are going to see wandering around and probably hearing from during this trial. Who you haven't met are my clients. This is Michelle David. Michelle, will you stand up. This is Michelle David. Over here with Michelle's mother is Lyam Kilker. Lyam is here with his grandmother. Lyam is going to stay a few minutes, then I think his grandmother is going to take him out of the courtroom.

Next we see Tracey explain to the jury the injuries caused to Lyam Kilker.

MR. TRACEY: This is the time for me to talk to you about what I believe the facts are going to be, what I think the evidence that comes in during this trial is going to be through the witness stand starting this afternoon, and through the documents that I have obtained as a result of this lawsuit. And so I want to start that by, this is the name of the case, as you have heard, Kilker versus GlaxoSmithKline. And Lyam Kilker, this is going to be undisputed, Lyam Kilker was born October 24, 2005. And shortly after he was born, Michelle found out he had been born with a series of congenital heart defects. During the time Michelle was pregnant, before she was pregnant, she was taking Paxil. She was on Paxil for her first trimester. Now, Lyam, after he was born, was at the hospital and he was diagnosed and his heart defects, there really are three. One is called the ventricular septal defect. One is called an atrial septal defect. Those are holes on the inside of the heart in the walls that separate the four chambers of the heart. The other heart defect he had is something called an interrupted aortic arch. The aorta, where it is supposed to curve, doesn't fully develop. And so what he has is three different, distinct heart defects, each of them related to the failure of his heart to fully develop.

Tracey then goes on to explain to the jurors about the FDA pregnancy categories.

MR. TRACEY: The first one is pregnancy Category A. Are there adequate and well-controlled studies? Are there human studies that demonstrate there is no risk to the fetus? If it is Category A, you can take this drug with impunity and you don't have to worry about children, you don't have to worry about if she gets pregnant. You will learn during this trial that, I think, over 50 percent of pregnancies in the United States are unplanned. Women aren't planning on getting pregnant. That's why these categories can be so important. You don't just consider these categories when you have a woman who is planning a pregnancy. It is any woman of childbearing years who may become pregnant. The evidence in this case is going to be that GlaxoSmithKline knew that over 50 percent of the women in the United States became pregnant without trying to, they were unplanned pregnancies. They knew this back in the 1990s. So Category A, no problems.
Category B, we have done animal studies, doesn't look like there is any problems. Animal studies have failed to demonstrate a risk to the fetus, but we don't have any human studies.
Category C is, we have done animal studies, we have done animal studies, and the animal studies have shown an adverse effect on the fetus, but we don't have any human studies at all.
Category D is, there is positive evidence, there is positive evidence of human fetal risk based on a number of different things, either adverse reaction data from investigations they do or adverse marketing data from women and doctors reporting problems with the drug or from studies. And in that case in a Category D drug you do not prescribe that drug to women of childbearing age with one exception. If the doctor decides that the benefit to the patient is worth the risk to the fetus, then the drug can be prescribed. Doctor Healy, who is a psychiatrist and neuropyschopharmacologist who is going to testify this afternoon, will explain that there may be times when the disease is so serious that it may be worth the risk to the doctor and the patient if there is a life-threatening illness. If somebody is capable of harming themselves or others, they may make the decision to prescribe the drug if, there is no alternatives.
Category X is, we don't care what the benefits are. You do not give this drug to a woman unless she has a pregnancy test that shows she is not pregnant.

Tracey adds:

MR. TRACEY: In 2004 when Michelle David was prescribed this drug, it was a pregnancy Category C, and GlaxoSmithKline says their animal studies have revealed no evidence of teratogenic effects.
Tracey then explains to the jury the process of human development.

MR. TRACEY: In human development when women get pregnant, what you are going to learn and understand is that the most vulnerable time to the human fetus is from weeks 3 to weeks. That is when the fetus is dividing and growing and is the most susceptible to something called a teratogen to a drug that can cause a birth defect. During weeks 3 through 8 the body is rapidly, rapidly expanding, rapidly developing. Cells are being signalled to go to where they are supposed to go. The heart is developing by week 8. By week 8 the heart, from a cellular perspective, is almost completely developed, and there is nothing you can do after that to prevent the heart, to prevent a heart defect if it has already occurred. The importance of this is that when women don't know or aren't planning on becoming pregnant, many times, most of the time, by the time the woman finds out she is pregnant, the damage has been done. This is when in this time frame, weeks 3 to 8, almost every congenital abnormality -- that is a fancy word for a birth defect -- almost every congenital abnormality happens during this time frame.
Tracey goes on to explain to the jury what a teratogen is. In a nutshell, a teratogen is any agent or factor that induces or increases the incidence of abnormal prenatal development.

Enter Dr Sloot

MR. TRACEY:  So during the course of this trial you will hear about teratogens and teratogenicity and you will find out about whether Paxil is a teratogen. And one of the ways you are going to learn about this is through a study, an animal study, an animal study done by a doctor named Sloot. Doctor Sloot is a European doctor who works for another pharmaceutical company called Shearing Plough. Shearing Plough is a pretty big company. You may have heard of it. In May of this year, 2009, a study was published by Doctor Sloot. The study said this. What Doctor Sloot did is, he took Paxil and all the other reuptake inhibitors and he exposed rat fetuses to these 12 different drugs, including Paxil. And what Shearing Plough was trying to figure out, what they were trying to do was figure out whether one of the drugs that they were going to put on the market to compete with GSK's drug was capable of causing birth defects. And so they took the drug they were going to take to market, and before they took it to market, they did this test. And they compared it to all the other SSRIs. Because, as you will learn, GSK never did this test. What Doctor Sloot discovered in May of this year is that out of all the teratogen --out of all the SSRIs, the 12, only one was a clear teratogen, Paxil. He discovered that Paxil in May of this year was actually more powerful a teratogen than cocaine. It would be safer, according to Doctor Sloot's study, to take cocaine than it would be to take Paxil while you were pregnant.

The Evidence

MR. TRACEY: I told you earlier that the way you learn about this case is through evidence, through witnesses that take the stand, through documents. And you are going to see documents in this case that have never seen the light of day before. You will see internal GlaxoSmithKline documents that the FDA hasn't seen, that the United States Congress hasn't seen, and that no jury has ever laid their eyes on before. For the first time in this trial you will see these documents. They have been under seal for over three years. And that's the way, one of the ways, you are going to learn about what GSK knew and when they knew it.

Tracey then explains to the jury how Glaxo had purchased the compound [paroxetine] from a Danish company called Ferrosan. He continues...



MR. TRACEY: Ferrosan had done the preliminary animal studies to look at teratogenicity. And they were done, I believe, in 1979 and 1980. And one of the studies was called Study 295. This is a study where they give Paxil, paroxetine, to pregnant female rats. And what the evidence showed in Study 295 is that the rats that got no Paxil, 88 percent of them were alive or 12 percent were dead by the fourth day after they were born. The ones that were given 5 milligrams of Paxil, 65 percent were dead by day 4. The ones that were dosed with 15 milligrams of Paxil, 92 percent were dead by day 4. And in the ones that were given 50 milligrams of Paxil, 100 percent were dead by the fourth day after they were born.

Ferrosan's Dr Baldwin

MR. TRACEY: At the time a doctor by the name of Baldwin, who works for them, Doctor Baldwin looked at the studies. He looked at Study 295, another study called 296, another study called 297. And 12 years before they started selling this drug to women in the world, Doctor Baldwin had some comments about these studies. What he told them internally -- this is a document that nobody has ever seen before. What he told them internally was: There remains the possibility this compound could be teratogenic at higher dose levels. As he saw, as you just did, that the more Paxil you got, the more rats died. And these were not heavy doses of Paxil. What he was concerned about was whether or not Ferrosan or anybody else was going to conduct or intended to conduct peri and postnatal studies to answer the question to why the rats died. He wanted to know that. In 1980 he sent a memo to the powers-to-be at Beecham. He said this needs to be done. The rats died. He talked about embryolethality. That means the fetuses die.


FDA Revolving Door

MR. TRACEY: Because I saw the animal studies that you just saw and the evidence that you will see about the animal studies and the rat pups dying, and I wondered how they could market the drug and say in the beginning that there were no problems with the drug. What I found out is that the FDA investigator that signed off and said you can sell your drug to the public is a guy named Gary Evanuic (sp.?). And Gary Evanuic, who signed off on Paxil being a Category B drug, now works for GSK. He works for GSK in the very department that sells Paxil.

Japan

MR. TRACEY: And as we are rocking along, in 1994 we are selling in the United States, we are selling in Europe. Business is brisk. Business is going well. And they want to move into other countries. They want to sell their drug in other countries. And they have a company called SmithKline or Smith Beecham Japan. It is one of their companies that is in Japan that sells their drug, one of their 70, I think, companies. And the Japanese, they suspected, were not going to accept their dead rat pup studies because they suspected the Japanese, because of the historical things that have gone on in Japan with birth defects related to Hiroshima, Nagasaki, and another environmental disaster there called Minamata, the Japanese had a heightened sense of concern. GSK believed that's what would be going on. And so GSK began discussions internally. Internally among themselves they said: What are we going to do, what are we going to do if Japan makes us do the studies to find out why the rat pups died? What are we going to do? Because what the documents, the internal documents that the FDA has never seen, that nobody else has ever seen, is, their conclusions were, if the Japanese make us do the studies to prove why the rat pups died, we might lose the United States market. So GSK was looking at science and research, not from the aspect of whether or not their drug was going to induce birth defects in children, but the evidence will be their only concern was commercial. Their only concern was whether they would lose the American market. The quote from them is: GSK concludes this is the study, the type of study we wish to avoid. We simply don't want to know the answer to these questions. They say: If the Japanese do request a study, if they do it, there is a potential problem, they may insist on us doing a study to their preferred design. And so what they did in March of 1994, they got a woman or man, I'm not sure which, I haven't been able to find out, named Gwyn Morgan. They got Gwyn Morgan involved. They put Gwyn Morgan in charge of reviewing the study designs that they would give to the Japanese. And Gwyn Morgan was to ensure for the company that any potential negative outcome from the studies is minimized. They designed the study to fail. They wanted the study to fail.

GSK Sales Reps

MR. TRACEY: GlaxoSmithKline has 110,000 employees. I think 40,000 of them are salespeople. What these people do, you will learn, is, they go to doctors' offices. And they take literature and they take cookies and they take lunch and they take pens and they take samples of Paxil. And they tell the doctors why they should prescribe their drug. These are bright, sophisticated, educated salespeople. They are the backbone of this company. And what they were telling doctors in the mid-1990s is that no drug is safer than ours for pregnant women.

Japan Revisited

MR. TRACEY: So we are rocking along. Remember that Japanese study I told you about, Doctor Patrick Wier? Well, they designed a study -- they avoided the studies they wanted to avoid and they designed a study that they thought would satisfy the Japanese, and they were right. But even in the study that was designed to fail, something cropped up, something that was potentially a problem for them. In this study done by GSK, which, quite frankly, by the way, was not a study designed to find out why the rat pups died, it was not a study designed to find out the answer to the questions Doctor Baldwin had in 1980, but some of rat pups did die, and they autopsied one of the rats. And in one of the rats they autopsied, they found that the rat that was found dead had edema, swelling around the heart, and it had a ventricular septal defect. The very same defect Lyam Kilker has. The very same defect that they had started receiving reports of in 1997. But they blew this off. They minimized it. In their conclusions they didn't even mention it. It is buried in the back of the study in an appendix.

Cannot Stop Taking Paxil

MR. TRACEY: Now, this case is primarily, primarily, about birth defects, primarily about what happened to Lyam Kilker and whether they knew about what would happen to him. But in the course of selling Paxil for the past 15 years other issues have come up. One of them is this. In the mid-1990s some studies came out, some literature came out, showing that Paxil had a significant problem with withdrawal. What that means is this. They were finding that women that took the drug and then want to the stop couldn't get off of it. So they would get sick. They would try to stop and they would get sick. And so they would be forced to keep taking the drug so they wouldn't be sick.

Glaxo Burying Data

MR. TRACEY: In the mid-1990s there had been some studies done, not by GSK but by others, and talking about withdrawal. This, you are going to learn from the evidence, caused them some concern. They were concerned about losing their market, losing their market to Prozac. And what they decided to do was, do their own study. And one of the documents you are going to see is this document, a document from a woman named Bonnie Rossello. Bonnie Rossello is the vice-president of GSK's marketing, Paxil marketing. And what Bonnie said in 1997 was: In response to this, let's do our own studies. Then we will own the data. If the results come back negative, we can bury it all. We can bury the evidence that our drug is a problem. In 1997 that's what she said.


The full opening statement can be downloaded HERE

After hearing evidence from both sides Jurors deliberated about seven hours over two days before finding Glaxo failed to properly warn doctors and pregnant users of Paxil's risk. The panel awarded $2.5 million in compensatory damages to the family of Lyam Kilker.

With the latest news coming from BBC's Panorama about other SSRi's causing birth defects it pays to do your homework on these types of drugs before taking them. The pharmaceutical companies won't be clear and concise about the risks because it would only serve to harm their profits. The regulators won't be clear and concise because they refuse to see the link, even when sent evidence from the above trial. Doctors will continue to prescribe because they have been told that untreated depression can harm the unborn - I have yet to see any clear evidence on this that has not been funded the the pharmaceutical industry.

Forget the doctor weighing up the risk/benefit - Weigh up the odds yourself. Don't be fooled by the stethoscope and BNF in your doctor's office. Look for the product placements, note pads, coffee cups, calanders - I'll guarantee they have the name of a drug on them. That's called good pharmaceutical repping.

Panorama will no doubt be accused of scaremongering. To me, at least, the biggest scaremongers are those that tow the line that untreated depression in pregnant mothers can harm the foetus and then prescribe an SSRi.

Whilst there may be evidence that depressed mothers should treat there depression there is no evidence that SSRi treatment can help protect the baby.

If you stop and think about clinical trials for SSRis it leaves you with a burning question.

Clinical trials for SSRis all have a protocol to follow. All stipulate that there can be no subjects allowed onto the clinical trials that are pregnant.

Women, when faced with the decision of taking antidepressants, should remember this. They should also ask their prescribing physician to provide them with evidence that SSRi treatment can prevent their foetus from developing depression.

There is no evidence. If evidence were needed pharmaceutical companies who carry out trials would include pregnant women in these very same trials. They don't because there is a risk.

SSRi birth defects include, but are not limited to:

Abdominal Birth Defects / Omphalocele
Anal atresia (complete or partial closure of the anus)
Autism Spectrum Disorders
Cardiac (heart) defects
Cleft lip and cleft palate
Clubfoot (one or both feet turn downward and inward)
Craniosynostosis (skull defect)
Limb Defects
Neural-tube defects (brain and spinal cord, spina bifida)
PPHN (Persistent Pulmonary Hypertension of the Newborn)

Even if you have taken antidepressants during pregnancy and your child is born defect-free you still have many hurdles to jump.

Breast feeding an infant whilst taking an SSRi carries risks too. Mothers could unknowingly be feeding the very same drug to their infants that the regulators have warned against giving to children and teenagers.

I've yet to see any Sir David Attenborough documentary that has showed me an animal eating toxic plants before allowing her young to suckle.

And we, as humans, claim to have the highest intelligence.


The Panorama story can be found HERE.

The following video contains images that some viewers may find disturbing.





Bob Fiddaman







[1] The Intensive Care Society
[2] "Teratotogen" - Medical Dictionary
[3] The Evidence, However, is Clear - The Seroxat Scandal

Tuesday, November 01, 2011

Canadian Psychiatric Association Roll Out The Pregnancy and Depression Tool





Self reinforcing delusion:


1. a delusion is a false belief or opinion
2. and a self-reinforcing delusion is one that creates conditions that reinforce that false belief or opinion.



October 14, 2011 the Canadian Psychiatric Association [CPA] presented their 61st Annual Conference where they rolled out a soon-to-be published tool that, they claimed, may help ease the decision-making process for physicians and patients alike.

Sophie Grigoriadis, MD, PhD, from Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, presented preliminary data from a pilot test of an "urgently needed" tool to help clinicians assist pregnant patients who have moderate to severe depression make more informed treatment decisions.

Urgently needed?

Informed treatment decisions?


"Conflicting information about antidepressant medications in pregnancy has made it difficult for clinicians to figure out how to treat these women. What we're trying to do is help them cut through some of the confusion by summarizing the literature in a way that will make it easier apply to clinical practice," Dr. Grigoriadis told Medscape Medical News.

And what exactly was that help in summarizing literature?

Grigoriadis explains:

There were conflicting reports about antidepressant use in pregnant women. In addition, evidence was also published highlighting the risks associated with discontinuing antidepressant medication, and specifically highlighting the increased risk for depression relapse in women.

In the end we need to understand that patients are at risk no matter what decision they make. They are at risk because they are exposed to depression, and they are at risk because they may be exposed to antidepressant medication.


Fair enough, although I would err on the side of caution when treating a pregnant mother with antidepressant treatment, the risk of malformations in the fetus would far outweigh any benefit.

Grigoriadis continued with:

The investigators looked at more than 38,000 abstracts and 821 scientific papers. Of these, 187 articles were selected for inclusion in the tool and underwent a quality assessment by 2 independent reviewers, based on a number of predetermined criteria, and received a final quality rating: high, moderate, low, or very low.

Not surprisingly, she said, almost none of the papers garnered a high rating because very few were randomized controlled trials. Most, she added, were deemed to be of moderate or low quality.
In the face of FDA warnings, she added, one of the finer points about antidepressant medications that is often lost is that these drugs still confer minimal risk to the offspring.

"Depending on the number of studies, the results change slightly, but what we're seeing is that these drugs are not hugely teratogenic, and I think people may feel more comfortable regarding that when they understand that these are not huge effect sizes. You have to consider that 3% to 4% of women can have a baby with a congenital malformation just by chance alone, and people need to understand that," she said.

Not hugely teratogenic?

How huge does it have to be?

Sagar Parikh, MD, FRCPC, a psychiatrist and researcher with the University Health Network in Toronto, who was not involved in the development of the tool, said it will definitely help fill a clinical gap.

He concluded: "There are clearly some studies that show some harm from some medications, but studies like the Paxil study are difficult to interpret on a case-by-case basis. Even from a societal perspective, it is difficult to interpret. If I told you 100 children in Canada were hospitalized at birth because of their mothers were on Paxil, but that the drug prevented 300 women with depression from being hospitalized because they were on Paxil, how do we weigh that? And right now, no one knows how to approach this dilemma."


Ah, no one knows.


Pretty much like a game of Russian roulette then, huh?

The CPA could always ask the pharmaceutical companies that manufacture these drugs if they are teratogenic, or maybe even approach Health Canada and ask them.

It's simple really but would, of course, throw a spanner in the works of this latest tool rolled out by psychiatry.

I applaud the Ying and Yang arguments but the debate about whether or not antidepressant medication can cause birth defects is a no-brainer - See Kilker Vs GlaxoSmithKline

Or, if you can stomach it, watch this short video:




The study was supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. Dr. Grigoriadis reports she is on the advisory board of Servier Canada. Dr. Parikh reports he has financial/research relationships with Mensante, AstraZeneca Canada Inc, Bristol-Myers Squibb Inc, CANMAT, Eli Lilly Canada Inc, Lundbeck Canada Inc, and Pfizer Canada Inc.

Say's it all really.



Fid

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Thursday, October 20, 2011

SSRi Use For PMS - Is It Right?




When faced with a patient who is suffering from Premenstrual syndrome [PMS] what is a doctor supposed to do? Evidence suggests that SSRi use benefits those who suffer with PMS but there are also those who have tried this therapy who have claimed that the medication has actually made them worse.

It's a given that SSRi use can bring on agitation when first starting and stopping abruptly, in some cases it can bring on feelings of suicide and also homicidal thoughts have been reported.

PMS is a subject that I, as a man, should steer clear of. What could I possibly know about PMS and how it should be treated? I pretty much know the time of the month when the need to walk on eggshells is approaching...or at least I did when I was married.

I could write a post making light of PMS, that would be wrong but most that know me personally would know that there was no malice

A week or so ago, a reader of my blog was sitting in the waiting room at her doctor's practice. To pass the time she started flicking through the array of magazines strewn around the waiting room. One such magazine was called "Healthy Magazine". The article that caught her attention was written by a doctor [male] and was about treating Premenstrual syndrome, also known as Premenstrual tension [PMT]. She was actually visiting her doctor because she was struggling to taper off Seroxat, in fact she had been struggling for over two years and was finally down to 1.5mg, a tapering process that had caused her feelings of suicide, anxiety, head zaps, profuse sweating, vivid nightmares, weight gain, plus a whole host of other adverse events.

The article, entitled, "Your PMS Action Plan", offered advice, much of which was about tweaking your lifestyle etc.

In finishing his article, Dr Nick Panay suggested that if the 'tweaking' wasn't helping then talking to your doctor may help. He went on to suggest that your GP may recommend an SSRi if it was the emotional aspects of the PMS that you were struggling with. The article made no mention of the dangers of this group of drugs, no mention of suicidal thoughts, no mention of withdrawal problems and no mention of the teratogenic effects that they cause. This bothered me, so I wrote to the editor of the magazine:

I have been sent a segment of your magazine 'Healthy'' that a reader of my blog, Seroxat Sufferers, sent me.

The article in question, "Your PMS Action Plan", offers advice, it appears, from Mr Nick Panay. [Jpeg attached]

I'd like, if I may, to draw your attention to the heading "When to seek help".

The advice about SSRi's is unbalanced and inaccurate.

Mr Panay claims that SSRi's increase levels of serotonin, suggesting that levels may be too low.

This has never been proven, it is just a theory and one that may be misleading to your readers. I'd be grateful if this section could be edited or an announcement in your next edition of 'Healthy' be made to correct this misleading statement by Mr Panay.

I am intrigued to learn what studies Mr Panay refers to in his column when he writes: "...research has shown that taking them for two weeks at the end of your cycle is as effective as using them continuously - without the risk of becoming hooked."

Two queries about the above statement by Mr Panay:

i; Could Mr Panay provide me with the research he refers to?

and

ii; Does Dr Panay claim that one can become 'hooked' on SSRi medication?

Dr Panay offers no warning about taking SSRi medication during pregnancy, in particular during first trimester where studies have shown that [in the instance of Seroxat] increases the chance of the fetus developing serious heart defects. I refer you to the recent trial of Kilker Vs GlaxoSmithKline, where GlaxoSmithKline's Seroxat was deemed responsible for the causation of Lyam Kilker being born with serious heart defects. GlaxoSmithKline have quietly settled, out of court, a further 800 cases regarding Seroxat's teratogenic properties.

A video deposition of how they [GlaxoSmithKline] knew years ago about this problem, but failed to act, can be seen here - http://fiddaman.blogspot.com/2011/09/exclusive-jane-nieman-video-testimony.html

I'd be grateful if you could pass my concerns on to Mr Panay and ask him to answer me directly as I intend to write an article about his column.

Yours sincerely

Bob Fiddaman.

I was grateful to Dr Panay for answering my query personally, many column writers or TV doctors tend to ignore opposition.

Dr Panay wrote via his editor:


Could you please forward the RCOG evidence based guidelines to the gentleman. These were developed by a group of experts including myself and ratified by the RCOG.

With regards to his numbered queries

1) If he looks at refs 13 and 14 these are two of the studies (there are others) which show that luteal phase treatment with SSRIs is as effective as continuous usage.

2) I would never personally use the term "hooked" - but, it is well recognised some women do experience withdrawal symptoms when discontinuing SSRIs abruptly - the point is that SSRIs should be withdrawn gradually to avoid these side effects.

Other points of accuracy

1) I do not suggest that there is a serotonin deficiency - the hypothesis is that women with severe PMS (possibly genetically predisposed) can respond adversely to the physiological fall in serotonin levels in the days leading up to menstruation (as estrogen levels fall)

2) As far as early pregnancy is concerned, it is a case of weighing up pros and cons, risks v benefits. Specifically, do the benefits of continuing SSRIs into early pregnancy outweigh the risks in that individual. By the way, we do prescribe Seroxat in our PMS patients.

I hope this addresses all his concerns - I am sure that he is aware of how underestimated the problem of PMS/PMDD is and would support an evidence based approach to managing this difficult problem so I thank him for his concern and critique.

The *RCOG evidence that Dr Panay sent me was attached and is available for perusal here.

It is quite clear that the evidence supplied does suggest that SSRi use for PMS is effective, quite whether we should believe this evidence is another matter. We have seen, in the past, how, for instance, GlaxoSmithKline showed how 'safe and effective' Seroxat was in children and adolescents - we now know that the study was not only deeply flawed, it was also ghostwritten. I'm not suggesting for one minute that the RCOG evidence is flawed or indeed ghostwritten but I reserve judgement as I have spoken with many women who have experienced severe withdrawal problems on the medication recommended by Dr Paney. That's me addressing the balance issue, the risk v benefits if you will. One such friend who, upon hearing about Dr Panay's advice, told me, "Talk about throwing gas on a fire!"

I disagree that medication such as Seroxat can be started then abruptly stopped [RCOG evidence - luteal phase treatment with SSRIs is as effective as continuous usage]

I also disagree with Dr Panay and his stance on the usage of the word 'hooked' - if people experience withdrawal symptoms then do we suggest that the drug is not addictive?

The article will be read by many, men, women and possibly teenage girls as they sit and wait for their names to be called out for their appointment with their GP's. My only hope is that they don't take what is written at face value, that they do their research on SSRi type medication and that they are each able to make an informed choice on all the evidence which should include anecdotal evidence of the many women who have experienced the horrific side effects that these drugs cause.

One of they key words in Dr Panay's response to me sticks out like a sore thumb. "Hypothesis"


Be it depression, shyness or indeed PMS  - The treatment of SSRi use and the diagnoses of the illness it is prescribed to treat is based purely on hypothesis. That is the risk when taking these drugs, you are taking something based on guess work and also based on clinical trials from pharmaceutical companies who have been less than forthright with trial results in the past. All I ask for is informed consent, by that I mean list every single side effect these drugs cause and not just the minor ones such as dizziness, sickness and diarrhea. Don't ever feel you may put people off receiving the medication that may or may not help them by hiding the more severe side effects. Patients have a right to know what they are putting into their bodies, be that in the form of a patient information leaflet or a column written by a doctor in a health magazine.

Would I recommend an SSRi for PMS?

No, I wouldn't.

Could I offer an alternative?

No, I couldn't.

Herein lies the problem. A problem that the pharmaceutical industry have the monopoly on.

To be honest I wouldn't give my worst enemy Seroxat, I've experienced the harm it can cause. If it can turn normal healthy people into killers then one can only imagine what it could do to a woman suffering from PMS. If drugs like Prozac and Cipramil can induce suicide and homicidal thoughts then the last thing I would recommend to somebody suffering severe tension would be drugs of this ilk.

I'd like to thank Dr Panay for his response. I don't agree with his stance and I cannot offer an alternative... that doesn't mean that I am wrong now, does it?

If you have been treated with SSRi medication for PMS and you have found the treatment to be efficacious or indeed the opposite, then please feel free to drop me a line with your story.




*Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists.




Fid

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Monday, September 26, 2011

**Exclusive - JANE NIEMAN VIDEO TESTIMONY GSK V KILKER




Back in 2009 a jury found by a majority of 10 -2 that Paxil was the causation of Lyam Kilker being born with serious heart defects.

During the trial much evidence was heard, what swung it for the jury was a deposition given by Jane Nieman who, in 2005, was employed by GlaxoSmithKline, the makers of Paxil.

Nieman, under oath, gave a video deposition.

For the first time, that video has now been made public and the edited version of the transcript is also available.

There are three reasons why I feel this should be made public.

1. It highlights how GlaxoSmithKline knew Paxil could cause serious heart defects...yet chose to do nothing about it

2. It clearly shows how GlaxoSmithKline's position of helping consumers affected by their product is one of a total lack of care, duty and responsibility.

3. GlaxoSmithKline, more often than not, settle out of court. On the two occasions where they have defended Paxil, they have lost. The Kilker case was such an occasion.

This lack of care continues today. GlaxoSmithKline refuse to help consumers struggling with their prescription drugs, they recommend that you "talk with your doctor".

The video and transcript from the Kilker trial shows how this wanton neglect is part of the money-making machine that is GlaxoSmithKline.

Briefly, the Kilker family had alleged that their son, Lyam, was born with a heart defect. During the pregnancy Lyam's mother had been taking Paxil.

Items of disclosure showed that another patient had discovered she was pregnant in December 2000 while being treated with Paxil. However, she reported that at six months gestation the pregnancy had to be terminated because the fetus was diagnosed as having Truncus arteriosis. Her physician told her that the child would not lead a normal childhood and would most likely not make it through the open heart surgery that he would need as soon as he was delivered, if he was able to make it to that time.

The video deposition sees lawyers probe Nieman for answers. What she revealed was damning for GlaxoSmithKline. It's also interesting to note that Nieman digs herself an even bigger hole when she suggests to lawyers that the initial report that concluded that the patient's termination was "almost certain" [related to Paxil] may have been a clerical error. Under oath she said;

"There's always the possibility someone made the mistake and checked the box wrong."

On hearing this, lawyers, rightly so, asked the following:

Q. Let's talk about the probability. Is the prob -- the probability is that somebody at GSK filled that in on the computer. Would you agree with that?

A. Somebody at GSK filled that in on the computer, definitely.

Q. Nobody from Pro -- from Eli Lilly or Schering-Plough came in there and secretly filled this in, right?

A. No. Right. Definitely that did not happen.

Q. And the doctor didn't break into the database, or the patient, and fill that in or write down or check off "almost certain" twice; did they?

A. I don't understand -- no.

Q. Nobody broke into GSK's database

A. No, no.
I'm sharing this video because I believe the public have a right to see how GlaxoSmithKline knew a very long time ago about the dangers of pregnant women taking Paxil [known as Seroxat in UK]

Here, for the first time, is Nieman's video deposition. It's especially for GlaxoSmithKline's UK lawyers, Addleshaw Goddard and comes with the message, "You can't keep a good man down"





Here's the transcript:



The full court transcripts from the Kilker trial can be viewed on my sister blog, GlaxoSmithKline Internal Files.


Fid 


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Saturday, September 10, 2011

RADIO PHONE IN - IRISH LISTENERS DISCUSS SEROXAT/PAXIL WITHDRAWAL AND BIRTH DEFECTS



Two previously unheard audio files for you...at least I had never heard them before yesterday. They are from an Irish radio station and went out in 2009.



RADIO BROADCAST 2009 - LISTENERS DISCUSS SEROXAT/PAXIL ADDICTION AND BIRTH DEFECTS - **INCLUDING PROF DAVID HEALY



RADIO BROADCAST 2009 - LISTENERS DISCUSS SEROXAT/PAXIL WITHDRAWAL




It's quite interesting to listen to these two audio files. A radio show discussed Seroxat and birth defects, the response was so overwhelming that the radio host had another phone-in the following day. Not one caller phoned in to defend the drug, in fact all the callers told of their horrific withdrawal problems with Seroxat...something the company, GlaxoSmithKline, deny. It's also interesting to hear a caller claim that talk therapy works so much better than medication. Talk therapy [counselling] was offered by GlaxoSmithKline Australia back in 2002. They launched an initiative called the "APlus Project" whereby patients were offered Seroxat [known as Aropax in Australia] - they were also offered counselling...on the proviso that they continued taking their medication, if they didn't then the offer of counselling was withdrawn. More HERE, HERE and HERE.

If you, or you know anyone suffering with Seroxat withdrawal, please read the following post - "GSK's Andrew Witty In Patient Aftercare Snub."


Fid
ORDER THE PAPERBACK
'THE EVIDENCE, HOWEVER, IS CLEAR...THE SEROXAT SCANDAL'
By Bob Fiddaman
US and CANADA HERE OR UK FROM CHIPMUNKA PUBLISHING

AUSTRALIAN ORDERS HERE









Thursday, September 08, 2011

Seroxat Lawsuit Settlements - A review



At no time did Seroxat manufacturer, GlaxoSmithKline, admit liability.


**Paxil is the brand name of Seroxat in the US.

Some of the successful Paxil lawsuit settlements include a case involving violent and suicidal tendency as a side effect of using Paxil. In this case a man using Paxil killed all members of his family then shot himself to death. A lawsuit was filed against GlaxoSmithKline and a settlement of $6.4 million dollars was awarded to the family of the man. [SOURCE]

Another successful Paxil lawsuit is about a case involving child birth defects. A family of a boy born with severe heart defects whose mother used Paxil during pregnancy won a lawsuit and was compensated $2.5 million. [SOURCE]

A class action lawsuit, involving users of Paxil and manufacturers in some states selling defective tablets was also filed. Such tablets broke apart or were being absorbed too fast or irregularly into the body. Paxil lawsuit settlements totaling $28 million dollars were awarded for compensation to patients who were affected in any way by defective tablets within the timeframe that the drugs were manufactured. [SOURCE]

According to information from the courts and people familiar with the cases, Paxil lawsuit settlements involving birth defects, suicide and other class action suits have cost GlaxoSmithKline over $1 billion. Successful birth defect Paxil lawsuit settlements have attracted compensation of between $1.5 -$ 4 million with over 600 cases remaining unsettled. Most suicide and suicidal tendency related cases have been settled with only a few remaining; compensation of about $2 million for suicide cases and $300,000 or attempted suicide. Other cases related to addiction, withdrawal symptoms and side effects attract around $50,000. - September 7, 2011 - Author: D. Jefferson


Remarkably, Seroxat is still given a clean bill of health from the UK medicines regulator, the MHRA, this despite there being at total number of 32,919 reports of 'reactions', 10,568 of which have been 'adverse reactions.' To cap it all, the MHRA still believe Seroxat to be safe and effective and also believe that the benefits of taking Seroxat outweigh the risks. They report that there have been 177 reports of fatalities whilst patients have been on Seroxat. [Fig 1]

Fig 1
In 1997 Glaxo reps were told to 'play down' the withdrawal problem with Seroxat [FULL STORY]

In 2011, GlaxoSmithKline will still not help consumers suffering severe withdrawal problems from their product. [FULL STORY]

Alasdair Breckenridge is Chairman of the MHRA - His former employees were GlaxoSmithKline

Dr Ian Hudson is Head of Licensing at the MHRA - His former employees were GlaxoSmithKline

You don't have to be Einstein to work out what's going on here folks.







Fid 


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Thursday, September 01, 2011

Glaxo in the Dock Again For Paxil Birth Defects

Image: drugawareness.org


GlaxoSmithKline, the company that professes to make you "do more, feel better and live longer" are back in the dock, this time in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.


Faith Gibson gave birth to her daughter only to find out that she was born with a heart defect. Gibson's lawsuit claims that GlaxoSmithKline failed to provide adequate information regarding the risks of birth defects for women taking Paxil during pregnancy.

The Vancouver Sun reports that a Judge has ruled that Gibson does not have to disclose her medical records before a class-action certification, her trial is a lead case in an as yet unheard class-action certification application.

The Vancouver Sun writes:

Gibson's daughter Meah was born six years ago with a hole in her heart, which required surgery and seven months of hospital visits

Three months after Meah was born, the U.S. Federal Drug Administration issued a warning for an elevated risk of cardiovascular birth defects for children of women taking Paxil during pregnancy.

Gibson's lawsuit alleges that the drug maker knew or ought to have known as early as June 2003 that there was a significant risk of serious adverse cardiovascular complication for newborns from pregnant mothers taking Paxil.

It further claims that the drug maker failed to publicize the problem and failed to apprise Gibson or her physicians of the inherent dangers.

If successful it could mean that any person in Canada, born with cardiovascular defects, to women who ingested Paxil while pregnant, and the mothers of those persons could be eligible for compensation.

The pending case echoes that of Lyam Kilker, a child born with heart defects after his mother ingested Paxil during pregnancy. GlaxoSmithKline lost that trial when a jury found, by a majority of 10-2, that Lyam's heart defects were a result of Paxil use by his mother. Glaxo appealed the decision then quietly settled an estimated further 800 cases claiming Paxil had caused children to be born with defects. Rumour has it that they eventually dropped the appeal against the Kilker family and also settled 'out-of-court.'

Paxil is a clear teratogen, something the British drug regulator refuse to acknowledge despite being provided by me with the court documents from the Kilker trial. The documents can be found on my sister blog GlaxoSmithKline Internal Files HERE.




Fid 


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Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Audio Recording of Meeting With Lundbeck to Hit the Internet

Tony Donnelly and Leonie Fennell, parents of Cipramil victim, Shane Clancy




Courage (also bravery, fortitude, or intrepidity) is the ability to confront fear, pain, danger, uncertainty, or intimidation. [Source]

On August 15 2011, the parents of Shane Clancy travelled to Denmark to confront Lundbeck, the pharmaceutical company that manufacture Cipramil [citalopram] and Lexapro [escitalopram]

Back in 2009 Shane attacked a group of teens [killing one] before stabbing himself 19 times.

Armed with a hidden video camera and audio recorder, Tony Donnelly and Leonie Fennell, Shane's parents, recorded their meeting with Lundbeck.

I have been privy to hear the full recording, it's explosive and is likely to cause a bit of a stink.

A pre-cursor to the audio recording, video footage, appears on Leonie Fennell's blog [HERE]

I have the utmost respect for any parent who confronts the might of the pharmaceutical industry. Their bravery boils down to an act of unselfishness in wanting to create awareness to others about the dangers of taking SSRi mediction.

Tony and Leonie...I salute you.

Fid


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Thursday, August 18, 2011

4 Easy Steps That Highlight GSK Suppression

1. Sign up to the GlaxoSmithKline Facebook page.
[Do this by clicking the 'Like' button.]

2. Open comments under the "Glaxo "Builds Bonnie Babies" advertising hoarding opposite Kings Cross Station, London in 1921, UK" thread.
3. Ask them a question about one of their products. 
4. Sit back and watch consumer queries get deleted. Here's some snapshots.




GSK DELETE MOST OF THE ABOVE MESSAGES



Just one more for good measure... this has not appeared on GSK's Facebook page...yet.







Wednesday, August 17, 2011

GlaxoSmithKline Facebook Update

Well, it would appear that Glaxo are offering advice to pregnant mothers taking Paxil on their Facebook page. When I say 'advice' I mean they are referring someone to "talk to their doctor".

A subscriber to the page wrote:[1]

Hi , A friend of mine is taking paroxetine and she is thinking of having a baby. Is paroxetine a teratogen?
Glaxo responded with:
Hi Joanne – We are not allowed to discuss product information or offer advice to individuals about medicines. Please ask your friend to speak to her healthcare provider if she has any concerns about her medication.
This is similar to the 'advice' they give to patients who contact them asking for help withdrawing from Seroxat [known as Paxil in the US] - [Back story]

Oh, and they removed my advice to the concerned patient. [2]



[1]

[2]


Plus ca change, plus c'est la meme chose.


Fid 


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Wednesday, April 06, 2011

SEROXAT/PAXIL BOOK LAUNCHED



My new book, 'The Evidence, However, Is Clear...The Seroxat Scandal' is now available as a paperback directly from the Chipmunka Publishing website. Copies can be ordered HERE

Price of the book is £10 - Postage from Chipmunka will be £2

The book will be available on Amazon in due course, unsure what the postage will be on Amazon.

Those who have expressed wishes to have the book signed can purchase directly from this blog. Please email me for details at fiddaman64@blueyonder.co.uk

If ordering direct from this blog, the postage to UK will be approx £2. For those overseas, I'll update on postage prices soon.

The Foreword is by Dr Jon Jureidini, child psychiatrist and clinical Professor, Discipline of Psychiatry, University of Adelaide, South Australia.

I owe Jon a great debt as it was he who set up the whole editing process [from Kindle version to paperback]

Here's his foreword.

Bob Fiddaman’s account of his interaction with the Medicines and Health Care Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) over the antidepressant Seroxat (and of his blogging of that interaction) is comic and tragic in equal measures.

Charles Medawar, whose Antidepressant Web was godparent to Fiddaman’s blog, spoke of a ‘conspiracy of goodwill’ arising out of the wish of all parties (doctors, funders, manufacturers and users) that antidepressants be safe and effective. Fiddaman shows us that there is also ‘bad will’ in this case, identifying cynical and exploitative behaviour by those who we should be able to trust.

Around half of serious adverse affects of drugs are not identified until the medication has been used for a considerable time. This delay is understandable because research to bring a drug onto the market only involves hundreds or thousands of patients, whereas a successfully marketed drug will be taken by millions. Therefore rarer adverse effects sometimes do not become apparent for several years after a medication becomes widely available. By this time many may have been adversely affected by the drug without they or their doctors recognising that it is harmful. And when a drug is very widely prescribed (millions were taking Seroxat), every delay of a day in discovering harms means that thousands more people will suffer. Therefore pharmacovigilance (the detection and analysis of adverse effects of medications once they come into widespread use) has to be central to drug development and research if we are to reduce harm from medication.

But in spite of the fact that pharmaceutical companies have an obligation to monitor adverse effects of their drugs, they invest only a trivial sum in pharmacovigilance. Their priority is the much more profitable enterprise of developing and especially marketing new drugs, where they make huge investment. This imbalance is understandable (though not acceptable) in the light of their need to turn a profit, and reflects the lack of any significant disciplining of their activities by regulatory bodies.

One person’s reported experience with a drug proves little but Fiddaman shows us what we can learn when we collect together the experience of many users. Patients’ collective experiences with their drugs constitute a gold mine of information for the health system and pharmaceutical industry, but we doctors and scientist make barely any effort to collect the data and make sense of it. It is left to small heroes like Bob Fiddaman to irritate the system. A more rigorous and informative examination of patients’ experiences with drugs could prevent countless crippling adverse events. If we do ever achieve a truly effective system of pharmacovigilance, then Bob Fiddaman’s blog will have played an important part in this outcome.

Please contact me if you would like a guest post considered for publication on my blog.