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Roche, one of the world's biggest drug companies is at
the
Centre of an urgent investigation after failing to report
that
people died while taking their medication
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Drug giant probed for not disclosing 15,000 patient death reports:
Roche under investigation by UK watchdogs after 80,000 'adverse
reactions'
by Jo Macfarlane
http://www.dailymail.co.uk
July 7, 2012
One of the world’s biggest drug
companies is at the centre of an urgent investigation after failing to
disclose reports that 15,000 people died while taking its medicines.
Swiss
pharmaceutical giant Roche failed to pass on a further 65,000 reports
of suspected side effects that were recorded by patients.
All
of the reactions took place in the United States over the past 15 years
with medicines used to treat breast cancer, bowel cancer, hepatitis B,
and skin and eye conditions.
There is no evidence so far of any
direct link between the problems and the drugs – but medicines watchdogs
say they are taking Roche’s failure to disclose possible concerns
‘extremely seriously’.
The
drugs involved include Herceptin, given to about 10,000 breast cancer
patients in Britain, and Lucentis, which is used to treat about 20,000
UK patients a year with age-related vision loss. The NHS pays Roche
millions of pounds for these treatments every year.
The
extent of the failings were discovered when the UK medicines watchdog,
the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA), carried
out a routine inspection of Roche’s drug safety procedures at its
headquarters in Welwyn Garden City, Hertfordshire.
The
company has now been ordered by the MHRA and the EU-wide regulator, the
European Medicines Agency, to investigate immediately each of the total
80,000 deaths and side effects reported. Both agencies said they were
‘taking action’ over Roche’s failures.
Professor Sir Kent Woods, chief
executive of the MHRA, said: ‘Patients should continue to take their
medicines because our investigation has currently found no evidence of a
safety risk to patients.
‘Roche’s
actions are unacceptable and our investigation has identified that its
reporting systems are inadequate. We are taking urgent action to ensure
that these are rectified by Roche as a matter of priority. We will take
action to ensure that patients are protected now and in the future.’
All
of the deaths and possible adverse reactions were reported by patients
who rang a call centre run by Roche’s US subsidiary Genentech. Staff
there failed to pass on the reports to Roche’s drug safety team – but it
is not known why.
Roche,
which made profits of £6.3 billion in 2010, has a legal duty to examine
every suspected side effect and report them to regulators around the
world so that potential safety concerns can be investigated.
All of the deaths and possible adverse
reactions were reported by patients who rang a call centre run by
Roche’s US subsidiary Genentech. Staff there failed to pass on the
reports to Roche’s drug safety team – but it is not known why
This
means that each side effect reported to the patient support call centre
should have been immediately sent to the safety team to be assessed.
These
must then be sent to regulators – within 15 days for the most serious
reactions – even if no link between the drug and the reaction be proved.
Some of the call centre’s records, which date back to 1997, are said to have been noted down on paper and kept in boxes.
The
European Medicines Agency, which made the findings public, said: ‘There
is at present no evidence of a negative impact for patients and while
the investigations and being conducted there is no need for patients or
healthcare professionals to take any action.’
However, a spokeswoman added: ‘It’s
not often we make statements on such findings, so we do take this
incredibly seriously. The numbers are huge but we’re not talking about
confirmed reactions.
‘Some
might not be related, and some may have already been reported to the
regulators via other mechanisms – for example directly to us by
doctors.’ But she added: ‘We cannot rule out that additional safety
concerns could be discovered.’
When
asked if legal action could be taken against Roche, she said: ‘We are
looking at all options. There are penalty regulations and they could be
fined.’
Other drugs being
examined include Avastin, used for bowel and breast cancer; lung cancer
medication Tarceva; Rituxan, which treats non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma; the
stroke drug Alteplase; Actemra for rheumatoid arthritis; Pegasys for
hepatitis B; and Raptiva for the skin condition psoriasis.
If
any new safety concerns emerge after examining the data, regulators
could decide to withdraw the drugs or change their guidance to doctors.
In
a statement, Roche said: ‘Patient safety is of paramount importance to
Roche. We acknowledge the concerns that can be caused by this issue for
people using our medicines.
‘The
non-assessment and non-reporting of these adverse events was not
intentional and we are taking comprehensive steps necessary to address
the findings of the MHRA inspection. We have provided initial estimates
of missed adverse events and are in the process of confirming the final
number.
‘We expect to complete all activities related to these programmes as soon as possible.’
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