Why
do you think the paper was highly cited?
|
“The
publication of this paper in 2006 has been met
with a significant amount of anger and
resistance from experts in the field, who are
now struggling to reassess the safety of these
drugs and revise recommendations for their use.” |
|
Our meta-analysis clarifies the magnitude of risk
associated with long-acting beta-agonist inhalers in asthma,
and raises the possibility that conflicts of interest from
pharmaceutical company funding may have influenced the
promotion of these drugs. This pooled analysis of randomized
trials showed that the use of long-acting beta-agonists,
such as Advair and Serevent that are amongst the most
prescribed drugs in the world, actually increase the risk of
asthma hospitalizations and deaths by two- to four-fold
compared with placebo.
There already had been some information in the literature
and press about the potential risks of the inhalers, and the
United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) had
considered taking them off the market in 2005, but it was
thought at the time that the evidence was inconclusive. The
results found in our meta-analysis are likely to be of high
interest to practicing and research clinicians, as well as
to regulatory review boards and the public.
Does
it describe a new discovery, methodology, or synthesis of
knowledge?
This is clearly a synthesis of the available knowledge.
It is interesting to note that many of the trials had
reported twice as many people hospitalized for asthma in the
treatment group compared with placebo, but because the
results were not statistically significant this trend was
generally ignored by researchers and practicing physicians.
Our meta-analysis pooled the results from 19 trials to show
a statistically and clinically significant 2.5-fold increase
in asthma hospitalizations and a 4-fold increase in asthma
deaths associated with long-acting beta-agonist inhalers.
Could
you summarize the significance of your paper in layman’s terms?
Asthma is a common disorder associated with inflammation
and constriction of the airways in the lung. Long-acting
beta-agonists are inhalers that reduce constriction in the
airways and improve symptoms such as wheezing and cough.
However, due to the development of tolerance to their
effects they actually decrease responsiveness to the drug
over time and increase inflammation in the lungs, resulting
in heightened reactivity to triggers that cause asthma
attacks. Therefore, they end up improving the symptoms of
asthma while at the same time making asthma attacks more
frequent and severe.
How
did you become involved in this research, and were any problems
encountered along the way?
I am an academic general internist and my field of
interest is evidence-based medicine, which means that I look
for standards of care that are at odds with the evidence. I
have read studies over several years indicating that
beta-agonists actually worsen asthma control and may be
responsible for many of the asthma deaths.
In 2004 my colleagues and I performed a meta-analysis
that showed that beta-agonist use results in tolerance to
the drug’s effects after just one week of treatment. We also
evaluated the potential conflict of interest that
researchers may have due to pharmaceutical company funding.
Our review found that researchers with industry
sponsorship were much more likely to say that beta-agonists
were beneficial than those researchers without industry
funding, even while evidence was surfacing that these drugs
may be unsafe. The publication of this paper in 2006 has
been met with a significant amount of anger and resistance
from experts in the field, who are now struggling to
reassess the safety of these drugs and revise
recommendations for their use.
Are
there any social or political implications for your research?
I believe the social implication is that physicians
should not just believe everything that they read, but
instead try to critically question whether the benefits of a
given treatment outweigh the risks. The political
implication is that our present system of research and FDA
regulation may not place enough emphasis on assessing
long-term safety of medications before they are heavily
marketed. The Institute of Medicine has recently made a
proposal for changes in our present regulatory system that
could work toward ensuring the safety of prescription drug
use.
Shelley Salpeter, M.D., FACP
Clinical Professor of Medicine
Stanford University School of Medicine
Stanford, CA, USA