Saturday, April 18, 2015

"Ezetimibe and Vytorin are just marketing tools, a way to evergreen the patent on Zocor." Ezetimibe might be nothing more than placebos??

Again, big pharmaceutical companies cause patients and prescribers to lose confidence on their drugs with unconvincing studies data....

The excerpt below taken from Forbes by Matthew Herper-


"..... Merck and Schering behaved terribly when developing ezetimibe: burying data, heavily marketing the drug with television ads, and paying some doctors to talk it up. From the start, the companies dragged their heels on starting a study to test whether or not adding ezetimibe to a statin prevented heart attacks and strokes. Such a study didn’t begin until 2005, a year after the drug was approved.

Critics saw the whole ezetimibe franchise – both Zetia and Vytorin – as a cheap trick to extend the life of Merck’s $7-billion-a-year Zocor, which would lose patent protection in 2006. The ezetimibe pills would have another decade of patent protection. When Vytorin, an ezetimibe-Zocor combination, was approved in 2005, Steven Nissen of the Cleveland called it “a step backward.” He added: “There is not enough evidence to justify putting millions of Americans on a statin-sparing medicine. Ezetimibe and Vytorin are just marketing tools, a way to evergreen the patent on Zocor.”

"...... I found Merck and Schering’s response to the controversy infuriating. As one top cardiologist after another advised that patients shouldn’t get ezetimibe unless they couldn’t take a higher dose of a statin because of muscle aches or other side effects, the companies just seemed to keep insisting their own data was meaningless. I remember Merck PR people pushing me hard to interview Antonio Gotto, the dean of Cornell-Weill Medical School, whose views on ezetimibe seemed far more positive than anyone else I spoke to. According to investigators for Senator Charles Grassley, Merck paid him $27,146 for lectures and consulting during that five-month period.

But once this negative narrative was set, there was a tendency for ezetimibe to look even worse than it was. It became the poster-drug for not gathering enough information about a medicine before marketing it. When more patients taking Vytorin got cancer than those taking placebo, it was easy to find critics who were worried about the connection. Scientists working with Merck misplayed their hand by trying to insist that there was absolutely no risk, creating a scary-sounding debate about whether the cancer link was unlikely or completely impossible."

"..... The questions this begs: should I think about taking ezetimibe myself? I eat broccoli and take the stairs. But my cholesterol has sometimes tended to be high– though I’ve lately kept my LDL around 100 with a combination of exercise and a healthy diet rich in nuts and olive oil. If I started taking Zetia now, lowering my cholesterol further, would it decrease my risk of a heart attack or stroke over decades? We don’t know but the prospect is tantalizing.

For years, many cardiologists have been arguing that we might be able to eliminate heart disease if we could get our cholesterol down to the levels seen in hunter-gatherers. Even very healthy diets do not do this. A daily ezetimibe might — but we don’t have the data to prove it would. What would doctors say to patients who suggested it?

“The FDA has not approved it for anything like what you’re suggesting,” says Braunwald. “But you know in medical practice you sometimes have to go by the best evidence that’s around. Just recognizing the fact that the FDA hasn’t approved it for these purposes, I would certainly strongly consider it.”

There’s a big counter-argument. The study of ezetimibe from last fall – the only real test of the drug that Merck deigned to do – was in heart patients, not healthy people. Nissen, the longtime Vytorin critic, proposed a different solution to me if I insisted on being a one-person cholesterol-drug experiment: take a half-dose of the well-proven statin Pravachol, which has a great safety record and has been much more thoroughly studied. Most likely I’ll do what I always do when there’s conflicting medical evidence and I’m in no immediate peril: nothing."

The hardest thing about medicine – and about writing about it – is admitting that we don’t know what we don’t know. At some point, doctors and patients have to assemble all the evidence they can, make their best guesses as to why to do, and take leaps of faith. All we can do is collect more data and make the leaps a bit smaller.

Friday, February 13, 2015

期待 · 频率 · 界限

事业、感情、家人一直都是人生的躯干。在三者之间,找不到平衡点是要不得的。烦恼多了,就没心情和干劲。一直不能满足,生活空虚,是因为在乎的事情太多。活得不开心,往往是因为想要的东西太多吧。无论什么样的感情,对人好都不应该盼望回报,可是还是会在意。给了很多、很多,所有的时间、关心、语句、诗、画、陪伴,感觉整个心都被掏空了。哪还有精神想别的?在社交上,有相同频率的人比较能好好相处,可是生活中的家人、同事、朋友、伴侣,都存在着各种频率的人吧。难道就不跟不同频率的人说话吗?唯一的方案还是找出彼此适合的相处方式吧。

老板对员工、父母对孩子、伴侣对伴侣,难免在相处上都会有一些事先设下的条规,任何一方都不可踏出界限。踏出界限的一方就不好受。例如:员工可以上班迟到一两分钟,可是不能无故不上班;孩子可以顽皮,可是不能弄坏父母心爱的家私;伴侣可以不必每时每刻交待,但不能完全不交待。这些都是一些不能跨过的界限,不然就要被处罚了。有了这些界限,难道相处就会没问题吗?还是有因为不上班而被开除的员工,被打的孩子……错在他们不遵守界限?

相同频率的人相处时自然不需要界限,因为了解彼此处理事情的方式。界限都是为了不同频率的人相处而存在的。不能遵守界限时,双方都不好受,因为达不到所期待的结果。老板期待员工好好工作;父母期待孩子乖巧懂事;伴侣期待对方关心爱护。当一方不了解另一方的期待时,就不能在相同的频率上沟通,相处就产生摩擦。这剪不断,理还乱的关系,总有个方法吧?

“待人退人步,爱人宽一寸”,说容易,做很难。我们自认很少可以那么伟大的无条件付出,总是希望对方也会为自己着想。可是任何一方都必须先让步,才有商量和思考的空间。最好的方法不就是两方坐下来好好的谈,问题的根源和适合彼此的解决方式,找个适合双方的频率继续往前走。

“生活时常和我们开着玩笑,你期待什么,什么就会离你越远;你执着谁,就会被谁伤害得最深。所以,做事不必太期待,坚持不必太执着;要学会放下,放下不切实际的期待,放下没有结果的执着。所以,凡事要看淡一些,看开一些,看透一些,什么都在失去,什么都留不住,唯有当下的快乐与幸福。” @励志帖

想要有好的结果,就要适度调适本身的期待,与对方商讨适合的相处频率,双方都遵守设下的界限,建立充满大爱的社会吧。

- Alor Setar, Kedah -