FDA issues warning on three anemia drugs
By Gardiner Harris
New York Times / June 25, 2011
WASHINGTON Federal drug regulators said yesterday that three drugs that had been widely used to treat anemia in kidney and cancer patients were so dangerous to the heart that doctors should consider avoiding the medicines altogether in some patients and using less of them in others.
The Food and Drug Administration concluded that there were no risk-free doses of Epogen, Aranesp, and Procrit and that doctors should use the medicines only in patients suffering from severe anemia. Doctors have used the medicines in the past to make patients feel better and as a way to increase chemotherapy doses in cancer patients.
But there is growing evidence that the drugs may have cost many patients their lives by causing strokes and other heart problems, as well as speeding the growth of cancer tumors.
This is a very big deal, said Dr. Jay Wish, a professor of medicine at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland. Its going to hit the dialysis population right now in a big way.
The medicines have cost the federal government more than $60 billion since they were introduced in 1989, and for years they were the biggest single drug expense in the federal Medicare program. The medicines have been big money makers for oncologists who earn a mark-up for many of the medicines they prescribe as well as dialysis providers.
But as Congress debates ways of saving money in the Medicare program, some critics have pointed to these medicines known collectively as erythropoietin-stimulating agents as examples of how poorly the federal government controls expenses in the program.
http://www.boston.com/business/healthcare/articles/2011/06/25/fda_warns_on_use_of_three_anemia_drugs/