CONFIDENTIAL DRAFT 2-18-2000
Annals of Propecia
Background
In April of 1998 I was contacted by NBC for a possible
appearance on a DATELINE segment about
Propecia. Propecia is the new name for the drug finasteride
which has been marketed under the name
Proscar as a cure for benign prostatic hyperplasia. Proscar
has been prescribed for older men with
urinary problems on the supposition that the cause is an
enlarged prostate. Propecia I was told was
designed for younger men who wish to grow hair. Since I had
never studied this use of finasteride, I
declined. I knew, of course, that finasteride would promote
hair growth and I thought it would be
interesting to follow this up.
The legal approval of a drug for a new use is based on the
data submitted by the manufacturer to the
FDA. Not finding the approval request for Propecia on the
FDA website, although the data submitted for
approval for drugs approved at a later date were already
there, I decided to obtain the Propecia materials
using the Freedom of Information Act. After some months, the
fiches appeared and DATELINE was
helpful in printing them out and sending the three pounds of
material for me to study.
There I discovered the beautiful data on testosterone to
dihydrotestosterone conversion. It is that
conversion that is the physical basis for hair growth. I
have good experience in searching the medical
literature. (I had found 45 papers in my web search of
finasteride as is described in one of my earlier
papers) 1, so I was puzzled. Therefore, I initiated phone
and fax communications with Keith D. Kaufmann
of Merck relating to Propecia. He affirmed that the
testosterone data had not been published. When I
asked why it had not been published but had been sent to the
FDA, he said that I must surely know how
difficult it is to get papers published these days.
That response convinced me to take time off from my other
research efforts to investigate this bizarre
response. I diligently studied the huge amount of data,
wrote up my results, and sent a prepublication
copy to the FDA ombudsman for transmission to the
appropriate FDA persons responsible for the drug's
approval.
In August of 1998 I submitted the paper ``Study of the Food
and Drug Administration Files on Propecia
'' to the Archives of Dermatology. It was given three peer
reviews, all positive, re-formatted as a
Commentary, and accepted after minor revisions. It finally
appeared about a year after submission, in the
March 1999 issue.
I am not a physician but a physicist, with over a half
century of experience in data analysis, so I thought
my examination of the data might be of interest. I was
pleased at the plethora of emails supporting my
material after it appeared in print. But I was concerned
that the FDA had not done an appropriate
assessment of the most quantitative data in the submission.
I did not criticize Merck but raised questions about the
FDA's approval and travelled to Washington to
speak with the Director, Jonathan Wilkin, and the chief
physician responsible for the approval, Hon-Sum
Ko.
I was troubled that not a single FDA refereee had commented
on the following key pieces of the data:
a) The conversion of T to DHT fell to a low level at .05
milligrams and stayed the same up to 5 milligrams
b) The efficacy had not been established below a dosage of 1
mg.
Further, although side effects at 1 mg were not frequent,
effects of finasteride on both semen ejaculate
volume and a large depression of the Prostate Specific
Antigen (PSA) score, (a test for prostate cancer),
appeared in the data submitted to the FDA.
I again returned to my other physics interests until a
dermatologist friend asked me in Dec. 1999 whether
I had seen three comments from Merck personnel denigrating
my commentary in the Archives of
Dermatology.
It is common in most scientific journals for the editors to
peer review articles that comment unfavorably on
a peer-reviewed article that they have already published.
Also the author of the original article is asked to
publish replies in the same issue. The Archives of
Dermatology did not follow this usual procedure
although the same issue carried a criticism of another
article and the author's reply. To the credit of the
Archives, my article appeared in an issue that carried a
full page advertisement for Propecia.
This present ``Annals'' deals with several issues. First, is
a response to the Merck letters that appeared in
the Archives. Most of the comments are so incorrect or
lacking in logic that I will simply quote them and
rebut them in turn. Second, I will quote and respond to the
FDA Director of Dermatology's comments on
my work. Third, I will touch on the new role of drug
companies in ``promoting'' drug use rather than what
used to be called ``filling prescriptions''. Finally I will
suggest activities that organisations, such as the
Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences or
Physicians for Social Responsibility, can
initiate to help improve the control of drugs that are now
flooding the USA markets.
Replies to the Merck Representatives
A. Keith D. Kaufman Comments ( AOD August 1999 )
1) Kaufman is correct in noting that my conclusions were
``based on serum and scalp DHT
measurements we made on balding men treated with finasteride
...''. Those were the data supplied by
Merck to the FDA and on which the approval was based. The
data showed the percent change in
testosterone (T) to dihydrotestosterone (DHT), was 46% going
from zero dosage to .05 mg and staying
flat to 5 mg. Any physician who has taken a pre-med course
on elementary physics, especially one with a
laboratory component, who examines the error bars on the FDA
plots that I published, would come to
the same conclusion.
2) Kaufman disputes the FDA data by referring to a paper
(his ref 3) which is ``in press'', so neither I nor
the FDA could possibly have known about it in April of 1998
nor can your readers yet assess it. He
quotes the difference in T to DHT conversion for 1.0 and 0.2
mg samples as 68.5 +/- 1.4% and 61.2 +/-
1.7%, (a difference of 7.3). These are not the data given to
the FDA. Nor did I get a preprint of these
results from Kaufman although he knew about my interest as
the result of our phone calls.
3) Kaufman further makes claims that the efficacy was better
for the 1.0 mg than for the 0.2 mg dosage
quoting his ref. 4, also ``in press''. That is not data on
which the FDA acted.
4) The hair count study: The number of persons in the sample
were only 101 (1 mg) and 99 (0.2 mg). If
Kaufman bothered to read the material that had been
submitted by his company to the FDA, page 23 of
NDA 20-788, he would see that Merck had properly given the
data as mean change from baseline: 68.7
+/- 17.3 and 54.9 +/- 17.3. These are the widths of the
distributions at the 95% confidence interval. At
the risk of boring the reader, we present in Appendix 1 the
standard statistical analysis of the data. Yet
Kaufman suggests in his letter in the Archives ( March 1999
issue) (his references 6 and 7) that a
physicist with over 50 years of publishing data in refereed
journals, complete with both ``statistical''' and
``systematic errors'', 2 needs to read a book on statistics.
5) Kaufman argues that I should have known that he claimed
to have data that proved that 1.0 mg was
superior to .2 mg in hair growth. To show this he gives his
reference3 (3 and 4) which he lists as ``in
press''. There is very remarkable use of the calendar in his
remarks, a kind of new time-reversal
invariance concept.
B. Janet L. Roberts Comments ( AOD August 1999 issue)
1) Roberts says ``commentaries are not held to the same
rigorous scrutiny and high scientific standard as
peer-reviewed articles" This does injustice to the
editors of the AOD since the article was peer-reviewed
by three physicians. The Roberts letter was not
peer-reviewed.
2) Roberts tries to sell the superiority of the 1mg dose by
referring to her reference (1) That reference is
also ``in press''. I do not claim clairvoyance.
3) Conclusion: Roberts has introduced a free advertisment
for Propecia in the Comments Section. My
article never said Propecia did not grow hair.
C. Diane Thiboutot Comments (AOD Nov. 1999)
) Thiboutot says: ``Dr. Frankel insinuates that
collaboration occurred between physicians and subjects as
regards questionaires and global assessments.'' Absolutely
nothing in my paper does so. The placebo
effect is a remarkable effect connecting mind and body.
Although it is routinely used in double blind
studies, the effect is rarely understood in its complexity.
It is recommended that interested readers study
the recent book The Placebo Effect edited by Anne Harrington
of Harvard Medical School.3
Roberts is apparently not familiar with the huge literature
on placebo effects or she would be able to
distinguish patient and physician assessments based on a
``Patient Hair Growth Questionaire'' or a
physician ``Investigator Assessment'' vs. real data based on
the counting of hairs from photographs. The
former are qualitative opinion polls and are usually only
used when real measurements of hair counts are
not available. This was not the case here. What Roberts has
not understood is that one placebo effect
arises because the patient would like to see the treatment
grow hair. So would the physician. To deny this
effect for physicians makes an unflattering statement
suggesting that physicians, unlike their patients, do
not have the same human responses. I thought it was worth
mentioning, from my examination of the data,
that there was nice evidence here for the placebo-like
overestimate of the hair growth for both types of
observers. None of the FDA referees commented on this
result.
2) Roberts goes into well known conditions on pricing that
are irrelevant to the drug dosage approval and
which are well known. I should not have made the remark
about solubility in ethanol since the FDA
actually blacked-out, i.e. censored, the actual solubility.
I apologize for not telling the dermatologist
readers that there is a trivial way to subdivide the pill:
Crush it between two spoons and transfer the very
fine powder to a small clear glass bottle of water. (The
containing coating is easy to remove.) An
extremely fine suspension is obtained. Shaking the bottle
and removing a tablespoon of liquid is the simple
way to reduce the dose.
I cannot understand why saving money ``cannot be condoned''
when the cost is approximately $1000 per
year, not covered by insurance, and the drug must be taken
forever in order to preserve any hair growth.
There are no data proving that the lower dosages are
ineffective while the physical T to DHT conversion
measurements are flat from .05 to 5 mg. Considering the cost
to take the drug for the rest of one's life and
that the drug is too expensive for most young men, an
intelligent user might want to do a few month trial at
lower dosage. Nothing to lose but some fuzz.
Comments on the FDA performance
13) While my article preceded my discussions with the FDA it
seems useful to report now on comments I
received in writing from the FDA:
a) The FDA denigrates the data on the T to DHT measurements
as ``surrogate'' even though there were
no low dosage measurements on efficacy. That beautiful data
cannot be ignored to justify the FDA
dosage approval. Surrogate can only be applied to physical
data if the efficacy data are done over the
same dosage range. Otherwise ``surrogate'' has no scientific
meaning.
b) ``Dr. Frankel is minimizing this trial by saying the
number of participants was only 100. In fact 466
patients were enrolled and 382 completed (92-98 patients
completing in each arm).'' Can it be true that
the director of the FDA does not know that the number of
patients receiving zero or .01 mg is irrelevant
to the comparison of the patients receiving 1.0 and 0.2 mg.
They have nothing to do with the statistics of
the 1.0 and 0.2 mg comparison.
By the way, the Propecia data still today (Feb. 2000), a half
year after my written request, is not on the
FDA web.
Perfortmance of The Archives of Dermatology
It is customary in most journals for articles on medical
matters, such as my commentary on the FDA
supplied data on Propecia, to be refereed, if the editors
reading the article judge it to be of interest to their
readers. The editors play a crucial role, especially since
they may reject an article they have read without
sending it to referees. My article on the finasteride data
was read by either Kenneth Arndt or Robert
Stern. the AOD editors. It was deemed sufficiently
interesting so that it was sent to three referees, all of
whom approved of publication.
Presumably the editors also read the three Merck letters to
the editor and should be expected to have
enough competence to judge their scientific merit. They
chose not to have any of the letters refereed, nor
did they follow the usual process of informing me of the
fact that were going to publish the Merck letters
without them being refereed. Normally the primary author
would have the opportunity to respond in the
same editions. Clearly they must have understood the special
status of Merck associates and that the
Merck responses may not have been entirely scientific. Most
scientific journals allow an author to
respond to his critics.
When I discovered the negative letters related to my study
of the FDA data I called and wrote to the
editors to discuss this matter. My letter of Dec. 5, 1999
and subsequent phone calls were unanswered so
on Jan 5, 2000 I again wrote asking that an editor call me.
That letter was ignored. So I decided to fedex
an earlier copy of this article to the AOD which did not
have this section in it. In February I received a
rejection of that article. I again tried to call Robert
Stern. After many attempts Robert Stern called me and
we had an interesting conversation, some of which is
repeated below.
Stern responded to my questions about his unusual decision
to neither inform me of the Merck letters or
give me a chance to respond by saying that he does not ask
for referees of letters. But he had to have
approved of their publication so he knew their content. This
happened a second time in the next issue
when the third letter was printed. So apparently he decided
that the Merck letters were valid and made
no effort to find out whether they were not.
He said he had taken the time however to read my prior
articles on finasteride. He then said that he had
examined my work on the frequency of prostate cancer due to
finasteride and thought it was not
professional. I have never published any article on
finasteride causing prostate cancer so this was some
confused invention to bolster his rejection of my article,
Ännals of Propecia". He said that the article was
rejected by Dr. Arndt but that he concurred in the decision.
The reason quoted was ënough is enough",
(setting a new style in editing). He also said one reason
for rejection was that the journal had ä limited
number of pages". Also, he said "The problem is
between you and the FDA and Merck and not with the
AOD."
Medical Journals
It is astonishing to scientists that medical journals take
paid advertisements from drug companies. It puts
the editors into compromising situations that must be very
unpleasant. I have seen this effect before. The
reader might want to read my article which appeared in
Urology 4 relating to my dealings with the New
England Journal of Medicine. The editor rejected my
finasteride article saying that it would have been
published if it had been submitted when the original Merck
finasteride data were published. Apparently if
one finds that a published research claim is flawed one
cannot point this out at a later time! (My
conclusions on Proscar were later verified in a double-blind
comparison of Proscar, Hytrin and Cardura
carried out by Dr. Lepor at New York University.)
Drug Companies
There was a time when drugstores had drugists that ``filled
prescriptions'' supplied by physicians. Now
the huge conglomerates, like Rite-Aid, send their customers
materials obtained from a drug company
suggesting that one buy that company's drug. Of course there
may be a better drug on the market so the
buyer is being given prejudicial information. I received the
pitch for Proscar but there are other drugs used
for treating BPH.
Conclusions
I have examined the responses to my article on Propecia by
persons representing Merck, as well as some
representing the FDA. I believe my responses will reveal
much to the neutral reader. Physicians recognize
the role of drug companies driven by profit. They are aware
of the underfunding and mediocre
performance of the FDA in the approval process. Very few
articles by physicians appear on this subject.
I will soon submit a citizen's request for the FDA to
reconsider its approval of the Propecia dosage and
plan to ask the many dermatologists from whom I have
received email letters to join in with this request.
But what is really needed is for physicians, not physicists,
to make the effort to improve medical practices.
Organizations like the Institute of Medicine of the National
Academy of Sciences or like Physicians for
Social Responsibility need to study how to make the FDA a
model federal agency.
Appendix I.
We reproduce the pertinent FDA data below:
8.1.2.4.2 Efficacy Parameters: Change from Baseline in Hair Count
Table 8.1.2.4.2A Least Squares Summary Statistics,
Confidence Intervals, and Between-Group
Comparisons for Endpoints at Month 6 Placebo-Controlled
Initial Study
| Table 8.1.2.4.2A | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Milligram Dosage | 1 mg | 0.2 mg | 0.01 mg | Placebo |
| Number of Participants | N=101 | N=99 | N=97 | N=96 |
| Mean Change from Baseline+ | 68.7** | 54.9** | -8.6 | -15.4 |
| 95% Confidence Level | (51.4, 86.1) | (37.4, 72.5) | (-26.5, 9.3) | (-33.3, 2.4) |
Note that in each case the change from baseline is closely
+/- 17.5 . Since the sample size is large enough
(approximately 100 in each group) it is reasonable to
compute s from the confidence level based on the
normal distribution as opposed to considering the t
distribution. The standard deviation s is then 8.85 for
the 1.0 mg sample and 8.95 for the 0.2 mg sample. The
difference in the means is then Ö2 ×8.9 = 12.89 .
If the distributions are normal with means m1-m2, we have
the 95% confidence interval - difference in the
means - of (-10.87, 38.47). Since these values cover 0,
there is no significant difference between the
sample means. Q.E.D.
written 1-4-2000
propcrap3 printed May 2, 2000
Footnotes:
1 Neurourology and Urodynamics, 14:619-24 (1995)
2 Apparently the medical profession almost never assigns
systematic errors in their presentations and
conclusions, yet in many experiments the systematic errors
are larger than the statistical errors.
3 ``The placebo Effect'', Harvard University Press, second
printing, 1999
4 Urology 50 (3) 319-20 (1997)