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FMS ForumsGeneral & SupportLyrica/Cymbalta Pain Study Fabricated
03/15/2009 04:12 PM
sleepwalking
sleepwalking  
Posts: 654
Member

Did you see this article in the Wall Street Journal this week?

This is big news for all of us, I think, especially those with fibromyalgia whose doctors have been insisting that if they just take Lyrica they'll feel all better (or that they should be feeling all better because they are already taking Lyrica). I'm going to make sure I have a copy to give all my docs.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB12...#articleTabs=article

Wall Street Journal March 9, 2009

MARCH 11, 2009

Top Pain Scientist Fabricated Data in Studies, Hospital Says

Article

Comments (15)

more in Health »

By KEITH J. WINSTEIN and DAVID ARMSTRONG

A prominent Massachusetts anesthesiologist allegedly fabricated 21 medical studies that claimed to show benefits from painkillers like Vioxx and Celebrex, according to the hospital where he worked.

Baystate Medical Center, Springfield, Mass., said that its former chief of acute pain, Scott S. Reuben, had faked data used in the studies, which were published in several anesthesiology journals between 1996 and 2008.

Associated Press

The anesthesiologist allegedly faked data in 21 studies on the use of various painkillers, including Vioxx.

The hospital has asked the medical journals to retract the 21 studies, some of which reported favorable results from the use of painkillers like Pfizer Inc.'s Bextra and Merck & Co.'s Vioxx -- both since withdrawn -- as well as Pfizer's Celebrex and Lyrica. Dr. Reuben's research work also claimed positive findings for Wyeth's antidepressant Effexor XR as a pain killer. And he wrote to the Food and Drug Administration, urging the agency not to restrict the use of many of the painkillers he studied, citing his own data on their safety and effectiveness.

"Dr. Reuben deeply regrets that this happened," said the doctor's attorney, Ingrid Martin. "Dr. Reuben cooperated fully with the peer review committee. There were extenuating circumstances that the committee fairly and justly considered." She declined to explain the extenuating circumstances. Dr. Reuben didn't respond to requests for comment sent through Ms. Martin and left at his former office.

The retractions, first reported in Anesthesiology News, have caused anesthesiologists to reconsider the use of certain practices adopted as a result of Dr. Reuben's research, doctors said. His work is considered important in encouraging doctors to combine the use of painkillers like Celebrex and Lyrica for patients undergoing common procedures such as knee and hip replacements.

Last month, the journal Anesthesia & Analgesia retracted 10 of Dr. Reuben's studies and posted a list of the 11 published in other journals on its Web site. The journal Anesthesiology said it has retracted three of Dr. Reuben's articles.

Dr. Reuben had been a paid speaker on behalf of Pfizer's medicines, and it paid for some of his research. "It is very disappointing to learn about Dr. Scott Reuben's alleged actions," Pfizer said in a statement. "When we decided to support Dr. Reuben's research, he worked for a credible academic medical center and appeared to be a reputable investigator."

Wyeth said it isn't aware of any financial relationship between the company and Dr. Reuben.

An FDA spokeswoman said late Tuesday she wasn't aware of the matter. Merck had no immediate comment.

Hal Jenson, the chief academic officer at Baystate Medical, said a routine audit last spring flagged discrepancies in Dr. Reuben's work. That led to a larger investigation in which Dr. Reuben cooperated, Dr. Jenson said. "The conclusions are not in dispute," he added.

Dr. Reuben is on an indefinite leave from his post at Baystate, the hospital said. He no longer holds an appointment as a professor at Tufts University's medical school, according to the university.

Baystate concluded that "Dr. Reuben was solely responsible for the fabrication of data," Dr. Jenson said.

Jeffrey Kroin, who co-wrote four papers with Dr. Reuben, said he was dumbfounded to receive a letter earlier this year from Baystate, retracting the studies.

"We analyzed it and made figures and graphs, and sent it back, and wrote papers, and everything seemed fine," said Dr. Kroin of Rush University Medical Center in Chicago. "If someone has a good reputation, has 10 years of papers and has a very high position within their medical school, generally you assume they have a lot of integrity."

Jacques E. Chelly, the head of acute interventional postoperative pain service at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, said he was "shocked" by the news of the retractions. Dr. Reuben "was very well respected," Dr. Chelly said.

He added that the situation has prompted his hospital to review the protocols it uses to treat patients for pain, because Dr. Reuben's work was so influential in establishing them. He said the hospital was now conducting its own study to verify the efficacy of drugs that Dr. Reuben claimed were effective painkillers.

In an editorial in the journal Anesthesiology, editor James C. Eisenach warned that "these retractions clearly raise the possibility that we might be heading in wrong directions or toward blind ends in attempts to improve pain therapy."

The retracted studies aren't expected to affect the drugs' regulatory status because Dr. Reuben's studies weren't part of the packages that manufacturers submitted to the FDA or European authorities.

Write to Keith J. Winstein at keith.winstein@wsj.com and David Armstrong at david.armstrong@wsj.com

Reply

03/15/2009 07:44 PM  Top
lisanaylor2007
lisanaylor2007  
Posts: 423
Member
I'm an Advocate

WOW...If I could swear I would right now. I will be bringing this article to my DR's attention. If he not already heard about it. He will...Because all the dr's thought that it was amazing that Lyrica did not work for me. They were getting all these positive results. And could not figure out why it did not work for me. NOW I KNOW!!!!!
Keep fighting. Fighting back is sometimes harder than being diagnosed. Each day is a new challenge. But you can over come what ever you put your mind to.

03/15/2009 08:35 PM  Top
0hCasty
0hCasty  
Posts: 2917
VIP Member

Wow, thank you sleepwalking. I is indeed a compelling read and very enlightening. *shaking head* unbelievable.
Love,
Casty


We are NOT insane, we are in PAIN!

Who are the Jones' and why do we care what they think?

03/15/2009 10:38 PM  Top
raynedae
raynedae  
Posts: 8219
VIP Member

I was asked to take part in a study of milnaciprin and Lyrica but I wouldn't go back on Lyrica. It increased my pain when I was on it.
rayn

I am not a medical professional so please exercise common sense when it comes to my advice.

I am also NOT a lawyer so exercise common sense when it comes to my advice.

I was a bookseller so you can trust my advice regarding books :)

www.operationbeautiful.com

Previous discussions I participated in:
Tattoos
Fibro or Not? Self-Diagnosing??
points to ponder

03/15/2009 11:38 PM  Top
amommy02
amommy02  
Posts: 1891
Senior Member

Why does this not surprise me?
I am not a doctor. Please consult with your doctor before following any advice given by myself or anyone else on this or any other forum.

Previous discussions I participated in:
sleep
Tattoos
Why are they doing this?

03/16/2009 01:54 AM  Top
ALCSS2008

I have no doubt that we have been manipulated not only in the studies, but also by the drug manufacturers. I have always felt that statistics an be manipulated to reach desired outcomes. After all, it has become a money making world. I often wonder that the cures for AIDS and maybe cancer are actually out there, but being held from us because of the loss of income this would cause to hospitals and drug manufacturers.

Is there any reason that medicines have to be so expensive?

Sandi


03/16/2009 05:37 AM  Top
broken
broken  
Posts: 9446
Group Leader

I saw an artical might have even been here about how the ph, companies raise the prices as well so even if you get say the generic form of something you actually pay more because its even cheaper to make.. just because they say something is fda approved doesn't mean a thing and with so many suffering and being diagnosed we are a cash box for desprate people..we could do our own study just in this group of how many truely were or are helped by these drugs and how many still take them..and what sever side effects there is I have a friend who takes lyrica ( I to tried and couldn't)

who now has sever lung problems and stays sick all the time..you get so use to a level of pain that in people who do not suffer from chronic pain would go to the er..so when a mirical drug comes out you are willing to suffer with oh not breathing good to get some relief if thats the only option..how sad the greed of america will be our nations undoing

we all have alot to give if one gets the help then some of this suffering is worth it..

remeber I am not a doctor I just say what I think

03/16/2009 08:09 AM  Top
rmm164
rmm164  
Posts: 2316
VIP Member

I got chills when I read that. To think that I took that dang Lyrica and gained all kinds of weight hoping every second to feel better, which never happened, just to find out the findings could have been fabricated. That doesn't make me happy. It actually brings tears to my eyes.
Rhonda

I am by no means a professional and the views I post are strictly my opinion and are not meant to substitute for professional advice.

03/16/2009 01:02 PM  Top
amommy02
amommy02  
Posts: 1891
Senior Member

I keep getting this message when I try to follow the link to the article:

PAGE UNAVAILABLE

The document you requested either no longer exists or is not currently available.

Anyway, I wonder if we can use this in our favor. Our doctors keep telling us that studies show that narcotics/opioids don't help fibro pain. Well if this study was fabricated, how do they know that the studies on fibro and pain meds wasn't fabricated too?

I am not a doctor. Please consult with your doctor before following any advice given by myself or anyone else on this or any other forum.

Previous discussions I participated in:
sleep
Tattoos
Why are they doing this?

03/16/2009 07:48 PM  Top
fluffyluggage
fluffyluggage  
Posts: 4723
VIP Member
I'm an Advocate

Wait, the title of the post said "Lyrica/Cymbalta..." but I only see Lyrica and Celebrex, plus Bextra and Vioxx mentioned in the column posted, so... What did I miss?? I'm confused!!
Just because it's impossible doesn't mean it can't happen.

I'm not a doc, so anything I say is my opinion only. Nothing I say is meant as offense, I offer what I can as help. I believe in educating myself on all my medical issues and being my own advocate, for no one else with do that on my behalf. I recommend we all do the same!

The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. Perhaps I truly am insane for expecting these docs to listen to me when I say the same things repeatedly to no avail? LOL. I am tired of seeking out new docs and getting the same result time and again...Forgive me if I seem bitter some days.

Something has changed within me/Something is not the same/I'm through with playing by/The rules of someone else's game/Too late for second-guessing/Too late to go back to sleep/It's time to trust my instincts/Close my eyes and leap...I'm through accepting limits/Cuz someone says they're so/Some things I can not change/But till I try I'll never know/Too long I've been afraid of/Losing love I guess I lost/Well if that's love/It comes at much too high a cost/I'd sooner buy Defying Gravity/Kiss me good-bye I'm Defying Gravity/I think I'll try Defying Gravity/And you won't bring me down...
--Defying Gravity (Glee Cast version)
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Health Topics: Bextra, Vioxx
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