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What have we learnt from Vioxx?

BMJ 2007; 334 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.39024.487720.68 (Published 18 January 2007) Cite this as: BMJ 2007;334:120
  1. Harlan M Krumholz, Harold H Hines Junior professor of medicine and epidemiology and public health1,
  2. Joseph S Ross, instructor2,
  3. Amos H Presler, research associate3,
  4. David S Egilman, clinical associate professor4
  1. 1Department of Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine, 333 Cedar Street, PO Box 208088, New Haven, CT 06520-8088, USA
  2. 2Department of Geriatrics and Adult Development, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, USA
  3. 3Never Again Consulting, Attleboro, MA, USA
  4. 4Department of Bio Med Community Health, Brown University, Providence, RI, USA
  1. Correspondence to: H M Krumholz harlan.krumholz{at}yale.edu

    In October UK patients who had cardiovascular events while taking rofecoxib lost the right to fight Merck in the US for compensation. But researchers and journals can still benefit from this case if they learn from the mistakes, write Harlan Krumholz and colleagues

    Rofecoxib (Vioxx) was introduced by Merck in 1999 as an effective, safer alternative to non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs for the treatment of pain associated with osteoarthritis. It was subsequently found to increase the risk of cardiovascular disease and withdrawn from the worldwide market. Merck now faces legal claims from nearly 30 000 people who had cardiovascular events while taking the drug.1 The company has stated that it will fight each case, denying liability.2 Our recent participation in litigation at the request of plaintiffs provided a unique opportunity to thoroughly examine and reflect on much of the accumulated court documents, research, and other evidence. This story offers important lessons about how best to promote constructive collaboration between academic medicine and industry.

    Early suspicion of cardiovascular risk

    Since the early development of rofecoxib, some scientists at Merck were concerned that the drug might adversely affect the cardiovascular system by altering the ratio of prostacyclin to thromboxane, which act in opposition, balancing blood flow and clotting.w1 A study sponsored by Merck during 1996-7 reported that rofecoxib reduced urinary metabolites of prostacyclin in healthy volunteers by about half.w2 In internal emails made public through litigation,3 Merck officials sought to soften the academic authors' interpretation that cyclo-oxygenase-2 (COX 2) inhibition within the vascular endothelium may increase the propensity for thrombus formation, the basis of what became known as the FitzGerald hypothesis.w3 The academic authors changed the manuscript at Merck's request—for example, they changed “systemic biosynthesis of prostacyclin ... was decreased by [rofecoxib]” to “Cox-2 may play a role in the systematic biosynthesis of prostacyclin.”3 w2 To the authors' credit, they continued to investigate the effects of COX 2 inhibition and ultimately provided much of the basic science knowledge that clarified the pathways by which rofecoxib probably leads to cardiovascular events.w4-w7

    However, despite Merck's knowledge that rofecoxib might increase thrombus formation, none of the intervention studies that constituted its new drug application to the Food and Drug Administration in 1998 were designed to evaluate cardiovascular risk. The nine studies were generally small, had short treatment periods, enrolled patients at low risk of cardiovascular disease, and did not have a standardised procedure to collect and adjudicate cardiovascular outcomes.4 Moreover, Merck seemingly pooled data from these studies and others for analysis of cardiovascular risks, despite FDA concern,5 and disseminated the results to promote the drug's cardiovascular safety to doctors in its “cardiovascular card,”6 7 a marketing device cited by US Congressman Henry Waxman for falsely minimising cardiovascular risks8 and never approved by the FDA.

    The VIGOR study

    In January 1999, Merck launched its largest study yet of rofecoxib, the Vioxx gastrointestinal outcomes research (VIGOR) study. The study was intended to expand the drug's approved indications by showing that it would have fewer gastrointestinal side effects than naproxen for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis. The study of over 8000 patients was initiated without a standard operating procedure for collecting information on cardiovascular events and without a cardiologist on the data safety monitoring board. Data safety monitoring boards are independent committees whose purpose is to monitor the results of an ongoing trial to ensure the safety of trial participants.w8 The study was designed to continue until a predetermined number of confirmed uncomplicated or complicated gastric perforations, ulcers, or bleeds had occurred.

    The first non-endpoint safety analysis was presented to the safety board in November 1999, at which time a 79% greater risk of death or serious cardiovascular event was found in one treatment group compared with the other (P=0.007).9 The board allowed the study to continue and planned to review subgroup analyses in December, at which time the analyses again showed higher cardiovascular risk in one group. On this basis the board recommended that an analysis plan be developed to examine serious cardiovascular events and that the study continue until it reached its gastrointestinal endpoint target (expected March 2000).

    Matters were complicated by the existence of conflicts of interest among board members. According to Merck policies, the board is supposed to be independent, without financial or emotional stake in the trial being monitored.10 Yet, the head of the VIGOR board was awarded a two year consulting contract two weeks before the trial ended and as the trial was concluding disclosed family ownership interest in Merck shares worth $70 000 (£37 000; €55 000).11 12 Although it is not possible to tell whether this financial relationship made any difference, the conflict of interest was not a matter of public record at the time the trial was conducted or published and of itself calls into question the independence of the safety board.

    The VIGOR study had enormous financial implications for Merck. If it showed rofecoxib to have better gastrointestinal safety than naproxen, it could be used to petition the FDA for a new indication. However, if the study raised concerns about cardiovascular harm, the billion dollar drug franchise would be threatened. The study showed that rofecoxib was not more effective in relieving symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis but did halve the risk of gastrointestinal events. However, there was also evidence of an increased risk of myocardial infarction (relative risk 5.00, 95% confidence interval 1.68 to 20.13). When this result was circulated internally at Merck, Edward Scolnick, the company's chief scientist, wrote in an email to colleagues about the cardiovascular risk: “It is a shame but it is a low incidence and it is mechanism based as we worried it was. [Merck employees/consultants] were right about the metabolite meanings, ie, urine [prostacyclin] data.”13 This indicates that, at the least, there were grounds for suspicion within Merck before the VIGOR study was published that Vioxx was associated with cardiovascular risk.

    Obscuring the risk

    Despite the concern articulated by Dr Scolnick, the published VIGOR study obscured the cardiovascular risk associated with rofecoxib in several ways. The report contained data from an interim analysis that had different termination dates for cardiovascular and gastrointestinal events (gastrointestinal events were counted for one month longer than the cardiovascular events). This highly irregular procedure was not described in the publication and had the effect of favouring the drug's effect on gastrointestinal events while understating the risk of cardiovascular events.w9 The published cardiovascular risk was not accurate because three additional myocardial infarctions occurred in the rofecoxib group in the month after the researchers stopped counting cardiovascular events (none had occurred in the naproxen group). The potential harm was further minimised by a post hoc subgroup analysis based on “indication for aspirin prophylaxis”; had Merck included the three cases, the subgroup analysis would have shown an increased cardiovascular risk in both groups.w10

    The publication concealed the cardiovascular risk even further by presenting the hazard of myocardial infarction as if naproxen was the intervention group (relative risk 0.2, 0.1 to 0.7) and without reporting the absolute number of cardiovascular events, even though all other results were presented appropriately with rofecoxib as the intervention group.w11 Finally, the authors proposed a naproxen hypothesis, suggesting that rofecoxib had not been harmful but that naproxen had been protective, despite there being no accepted evidence that naproxen had a strong cardioprotective effect.

    Merck strongly promoted the VIGOR study, purchasing nearly 1 million reprints to circulate to doctors and other health professionals. The New England Journal of Medicine reported problems with the study in an “expression of concern” published in 2006,w10 and the editor in chief has said that the authors “withheld critical data on the cardiovascular toxicity of Merck's drug Vioxx.”14 Nevertheless, none of the authors has publicly conceded error or taken responsibility for the biased presentation of the study results. In fact, two VIGOR authors and the head of the VIGOR board continue to collaborate on high profile research with Merck.15

    Except for a 2001 study published in JAMA that raised questions about the safety of rofecoxib and the validity of the naproxen hypothesis,w12 few academic researchers publicly questioned the company before its voluntary withdrawal of the drug. Moreover, Merck selectively targeted doctors who raised questions about the drug, going so far as pressurising some of them through department chairs.16

    Short and long term use

    For several years, Merck continued to investigate other indications for rofecoxib and conducted additional trials. The increased cardiovascular risk compared with placebo was reported in a 2004 analysis of the adenomatous polyp prevention on Vioxx (APPROVe) study,w13 which led to the drug's withdrawal. The financial implications were immense not only because of loss of revenue but also because of expected litigation. The key question was when the risk became manifest. If short term use was not associated with increased cardiovascular risk, Merck's liability would potentially be drastically reduced.

    The APPROVe authors, five of whom were Merck employees and the remainder of whom received consulting fees from Merck, asserted that the increased risk became apparent only after 18 months of use.w13 This conclusion was based on an analysis that was not prespecified and a flawed methodological approach. Merck subsequently admitted that it had incorrectly described the statistical approach, and the New England Journal of Medicine issued a correction indicating that statements regarding an increase in risk after 18 months should be removed from the article.w14 Again, mistakes that favoured the company, with colossal economic implications, made it through the journal peer review process to the profession and the public.

    Medical journals

    The New England Journal of Medicine has had a prominent role in the story. It published the VIGOR and APPROVe studies, responding to their inaccuracies with “an expression of concern”w9 w10 and a correctionw14 and publishing a methodological paperw15 and other related comments and editorials.w16-w24 But other academic medical journals also played important parts. In 2001, Circulation published a pooled analysis of 23 phase IIb-V studies examining the association between rofecoxib and cardiovascular risk. The paper had no editorial commentary or critique,w25 even though the study was coordinated internally at Merck, the results highly favoured the safety of rofecoxib, and five of the seven authors were Merck employees (the two academic authors acknowledged being paid consultants to Merck). Moreover, in internal emails made public through litigation, even an executive scientist at Merck criticised the analysis, stating: “The data appears to have been interpreted to support a preconceived hypothesis rather than critically reviewing the data to generate hypotheses.”17

    The Annals of Internal Medicine published the assessment of differences between Vioxx and naproxen to ascertain gastrointestinal tolerability and effectiveness (ADVANTAGE) study.w26 It later learnt that article was written by Merck without accreditation,w27 w28 contained errors in the presentation of cardiovascular events with rofecoxib (minimising cardiovascular risk), and was conducted for marketing purposes, a so called seeding trial. The journal was quick to condemn ghostwritingw29 and a full correction of the errors was published recentlyw30 after Merck scientists provided an initial, but incorrect explanation.w31 Many other journals have published articles with results favourable to rofecoxib that court documents have shown to be ghostwritten by scientific writing companies hired by Merck.w32-w36

    Promoting constructive collaboration

    The rofecoxib case is bad news for industry, academics, journals, and the public. Merck was once one of the US's most publicly admired companies,w37 and its behaviour may not be different from that of others in the pharmaceutical or biotechnology industry. Journalists have questioned the ethics of industry and academic researchers.18 19 20 And yet, there is hardly a sense of outrage in the profession about the events that transpired.

    Defenders of Merck may say that we do not know how rofecoxib's cardiovascular risk compares with that of other COX 2 inhibitors or traditional non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. But the proper place of these drugs in the medical armamentarium is beside the point. With billions of dollars at stake, Merck conducted the trials, stored and analysed the data internally, paid academic researchers as consultants to the investigative teams and the safety monitoring boards, and maintained heavy involvement in the writing and presentation of findings. The journals published the studies, and the academic community accepted the findings without expressing much concern. Nearly 107 million prescriptions for rofecoxib were dispensed in the US between 1999 and September 2004,21 when the drug was withdrawn from the market, and none of the people picking up those prescriptions had the opportunity to consider the true balance of its risks and benefits.

    What should we do going forward? Academic medicine, industry, medical journals, and government agencies need to come together to define a set of principles by which we can restore faith in collaborations on new treatments that can improve patient care. We might consider adopting some new approaches. Academics engaged in industry designed and sponsored studies should insist that the data are stored on an academic site, analysed by non-company investigators, and eventually made accessible to the public for scrutiny. Several early, large clinical trials of rofecoxib were not published in the academic literature for years after Merck made them available to the FDA,22 preventing independent investigators from accurately determining its cardiovascular risk using meta-analysis. In addition, independent audits should be conducted to ensure that companies follow a standardised, prespecified protocol.

    Independent data and safety monitoring boards should be mandated and their governance should not be under the control of the company. Industry should not be allowed to select who serves on these boards or allowed to compensate members after their service.

    In considering articles for publications, journals should understand that studies with immense financial implications require a higher level of scrutiny than others, especially when the study is conducted by the company with the financial stake. Journals should be prepared to go beyond the usual high quality review, paying particular attention to the possibility of bias. Articles should be accompanied by editorials by people without financial conflicts of interest. Moreover, ghostwriting constitutes a false statement of authorship or a false attribution of authorship, and academic researchers who sign off or “edit” original publications or reviews written by industry should be penalised unless there is full disclosure of the authorship, such as: “Representatives from XYZ drafted the manuscript; the authors were responsible for critical revisions of the manuscript for important intellectual content.”

    Even the best oversight cannot always detect mistakes. When journals discover that information has been withheld or that results are incorrect, they need to rapidly disseminate that information and ensure that any web search that identifies the errant manuscript also identifies the correction. Authors should sign agreements that they will notify journals if such information becomes available or face being blacklisted by the journal.

    Our system depends on putting patients' interests first. Collaborations between academics, practising doctors, industry, and journals are essential in advancing knowledge and improving the care of patients. Trust is a necessary element of this partnership, but the recent events have made it necessary to institute proper systems that protect the interests of patients. A renewed commitment by all those involved and the institution of these systems are the only way to extract something positive from this unfortunate affair.

    Summary points

    • Merck faces legal claims from nearly 30 000 people who had an adverse cardiovascular event while taking rofecoxib (Merck denies liability)

    • Published studies of the drug obscured the risk

    • Merck had influence over all aspects, including data analysis, safety monitoring, and reporting

    • Academic medicine, industry, medical journals, and government agencies need to define a set of principles to restore trust in collaborations on drug development

    Footnotes

    • References w1-w37 are on bmj.com

    • Contributors and sources: HMK's research is focused on determining optimal clinical strategies and identifying opportunities for improvement in the prevention, treatment, and outcome of cardiovascular disease with emphasis on older populations. He was responsible for the concept and writing of this article and is its guarantor. JSR has studied and reported on conflict of interest in medicine. He participated in the concept and design of this article and revised it for critical content. AHP has research interests in the history of public health and law, including pharmaceutical research and marketing. He consults on this topic at the request of plaintiffs in the Vioxx litigation. He contributed document research and interpretation to this article and participated in its revision. DSE has studied and reported corporate corruption of science. He contributed to the development of this article and revised the work for critical content. This article arose from access to Merck documents as a result of tort litigation.

    • Competing interests: HMK has research contracts with the American College of Cardiology and the Colorado Foundation for Medical Care; serves on the advisory boards of Amgen, Alere, and UnitedHealthcare; is a subject expert for VHA; and is editor in chief of Journal Watch Cardiology. All authors have been consultants at the request of plaintiffs for recent suits against Merck related to rofecoxib.

    References

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