Please BOOKMARK this site for future reference and be sure to visit our articles,
resources and
brochure pages.
The Consumer Law Page is regularly updated and is published by Alexander Hawes, LLP,
a law firm leading the legal profession in serving the public, consumers
and small businesses, individually and in class actions, in cases in which
corporate abuse, fraud, defective products and toxic chemicals have caused
personal injuries or damage to property. This site, along with its affiliate
site, Alexander Hawes, LLP,
averages thousands of visits per month. Thank you for your positive
response.
In 1962, amendments to the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act required that safety and efficacy data be provided for all
pharmaceuticals, with the exception of those marketed prior to 1938. However, if the manufacturer wished to change the
indications or dosage form of a pre-1938 drug, a full safety and efficacy application, known as a New Drug Application,
would have to be submitted. In 1978, the last year for which data are available, the FDA estimated that 240 of the pre-1938
pharmaceuticals are being manufactured. Of these, only 45 had submitted safety and efficacy data in New Drug Applications,
in most instances for not all dosage forms of the medication. FDAs failure to conduct such a review has permitted these
medicationsto remain largely unregulated.
Levothyroxine is a medication used to replace thyroid hormone in patients with low levels of the hormone (hypothyroidism). It
is sold today as Synthroid, the fourth-most commonly prescribed drug in the United States with annual wholesale sales of
$276 million. This drug has never been subject to FDA review.
Because there is no FDA-approved standard for bioequivalence (suitability for substitution), Synthroid has captured 85
percent of the U.S. market for levothyroxine. Synthroids manufacturer, Knoll Pharmaceuticals Company of Mount Olive,
New Jersey, is using the absence of a bioequivalence standard to protect its market share by misleading doctors and
pharmacists in glossy promotional materials that proclaim that there is "No proven bioequivalent product", "There is no
substitute for Synthroid" and "No adequate and well-controlled studies have demonstrated bioequivalence among
levothyroxine sodium products. " E.g. see advertisement from Drug Topics, April 22, 1996. These statements are only
possible because the FDA has not adequately regulated levothyroxine.
FDAs failure to regulate has also permitted the outrageous chain of events related to Synthroid outlined in the Wall Street
Journal on April 25, 1996. In summary, in 1986, Knoll approached researchers at the University of California, San Francisco
(UCSF) to do a study comparing the bioequivalence of four brands of levothyroxine, including Knolls own formulation,
Synthroid. During the course of events described here, the company was known first as Flint Laboratories, Inc., then as Boots
Pharmaceuticals, Inc. and finally as Knoll Pharmaceutical Company. The research, completed in 1990, found the four forms
of levothyroxine (two brand name and two generic) to be "bioequivalent" and a manuscript reporting this was submitted to and
accepted for publication by the prestigious Journal of the American Medical Association in late 1994. However, fearing a
threatened lawsuit from Knoll, which had signed a contract with UCSF preventing the researchers from publishing any data
without Knolls permission, UCSF pressured its own researchers to withdraw the manuscript one day prior to the journals
going to press. Subsequently, Knoll employees produced a new manuscript based on the UCSF data claiming that the UCSF
study was flawed and that the four levothyroxine preparations were "therapeutically inequivalent." A paper reflecting this
perspective was published in June 1995 under the title "Limitations of levothyroxine bioequivalence evaluation: analysis of an
attempted study" in the obscure American Journal of Therapeutics, whose Associate Editor is the first author on the revised
manuscript. The publication of this latter manuscript, which did not include any of the UCSF researchers as co-authors, may
well preclude publication of the version accepted by the Journal of the American Medical Association.
The cost implications of this perversion of the scientific process are staggering. While most medications that lose patent
protection (which usually occurs 17 years after the patent is filed) rapidly lose market share, in 1993 Synthroid still retained 85
percent or $235 million of the $276 million wholesale levothyroxine market, even though levothyroxine was initially marketed
over half a century ago. If, as a result of these important findings being made public, Knolls market share had fallen to 25
percent of prescriptions -- comparable to the market share of Valium about a decade after it lost patent -- at least $258
million (wholesale) would have been saved between 1993, by which time the results should have been published, and the
present. However, thanks to Knolls heavy-handed tactics and UCSFs failure to resist them, physicians and patients have
been denied this basic information and American consumers have paid the price.
As mentioned above, another reason that Knoll has cornered such a disproportionate share of the market is that, except for
standards governing Good Manufacturing Practice, the FDA has failed to regulate levothyroxine bioequivalence or on how
studies to assess bioequivalence should be conducted, has permitted the perpetuation of myths of generic levothyroxine
inferiority. This is not the first time levothyroxine bioequivalence has been an issue. In 1982, for example, Knoll reformulated
Synthroid. Many patients ended up receiving inordinately high doses of Synthroid because the pre-1982 formulation of
Synthroid had contained only about 78 percent of the expected potency. Stoffer SS, Szunar WE. Potency of levothyroxine
products. Journal of the American Medical Association 1984; 251: 635-636. Although bioequivalence standards exist for
most drugs marketed in the United States, levothyroxines status as a pre-1938 drug has allowed it to evade adequate
regulation.
The events described in the Wall Street Journal date back to March 1986 when Drs. Betty J. Dong and Francis S. Greenspan
at UCSFs Schools of Pharmacy and Medicine were approached by Knoll and asked to conduct a clinical trial comparing
Synthroid to three other forms of levothyroxine. By February 1988, the study had been designed and had the approval of
both Knoll and UCSFs Committee on Human Research. A contract to perform the work was signed in May 1988. The
contract stipulated the study design and methods of statistical analysis, consistent with standard methods for bioequivalence
determination. The contract also contained the following sentence: "Data obtained by the investigator while carrying out this
study is [sic] also considered confidential and is not to be published or otherwise released without consent from Flint
Laboratories, Inc." (later known as Knoll). The contract was so similar to other pharmaceutical company contracts being
routinely approved by UCSF (and other institutions), that Dr. Dong was not required to pass it through UCSFs Contracts
and Grants office prior to signing it. UCSFs legal counsel at the time, Joe Cowan, JD, reviewed the contract on several
occasions after it had been signed but before problems arose with Knoll, and stated that it would not represent a barrier to
publication and that the university would defend her should any problems arise. (Subsequently, in the Fall of 1995, UCSF
issued guidelines urging researchers not to sign contracts with clauses precluding publication without the sponsors approval.
However, such gag clauses may still be employed at other universities.)
Between 1988 and June 1990, the study was conducted according to the guidelines described in the contract, whereupon the
study blood samples were sent to the University of Chicago for analysis. These results were provided to Knoll and the UCSF
authors in December 1990. It was only when the results of the study became available that Knoll began to raise questions
about the conduct of the study and its interpretation, a controversy that would continue for four years. Some of Knolls
comments were incorporated into the manuscript being prepared by Dr. Dong and her colleagues. Apparently dissatisfied, on
March 4, 1994 Knoll Senior Vice President for Research and Development, Neil M. Kurtz, M.D., wrote to Dr. Dong and
several members of the UCSF faculty and staff, including the Chancellor, all the Vice-Chancellors, and the Chairpersons of
Medicine, Family and Community Medicine, and Pharmacy, as well as the Director of UCSFs Program in Medical Ethics.
The letter argued that the study had been flawed and should not be published. On August 5, 1994, UCSF Associate
Vice-Chancellor for Academic Affairs Karl J. Hittleman, PhD, wrote to Knolls Dr. Kurtz refusing to suppress the manuscript
and saying that to do so would be a violation of academic freedom. In November 1994, the manuscript was submitted to the
Journal of the American Medical Association.
Dr. Dongs manuscript, entitled "Bioequivalence of generic and brand levothyroxine products in the treatment of
hypothyroidism" was randomized, four-way crossover trial comparing the bioavailability of four levothyroxine preparations:
Synthroid (Knoll), Levoxine (Daniels), and two generic formulations manufactured by Pharmaceutical Basics and distributed
by Geneva Generics and Rugby. Subjects received all four brands of levothyroxine for a period of at least six weeks in a
randomly assigned sequence that ensured that potential carryover effects from the previous formulation would introduce no
bias into the evaluation. Primary investigators were blinded were blinded as to which formulation the subjects were taking at
any given time.
Three aspects of bioequivalence (area under the curve, peak serum concentration, and time to peak serum concentration)
were measured for each of three indices of thyroid function (T4 (levothyroxine), T3, and free T4 index). For all nine
comparisons, there was no statistically significant difference between the four formulations, indicating that they were
bioequivalent, even using a criterion for bioequivalence considerably more stringent than that employed by the FDA for other
compounds. The authors concluded that the four generic and brand levothyroxine preparations studied were bioquivalent and
interchangeable for most patients taking levothyroxine hormone.
In the Fall of 1994, Gilbert H. Mayor, M.D., Senior Director of Medical Research at Knoll, called Dr. Greenspan and
threatened a lawsuit against both UCSF and the authors should the manuscript be published. In December 1994, Dr. Dongs
paper was accepted for publication in the Journal of the American Medical Association following review by five peer
reviewers, more than usually review manuscripts for the Journal. One day prior to the date on which that issue of the journal
was to go to print, and with her article already in galleys, Dr. Dong received a telephone call from Cynthia Lynch, J.D.,
assistant to Shelley Drake, the campus counsel who had succeeded Joe Cowan in dealing with this issue. Ms. Lynch insisted
that Dr. Cong withdraw the article from publication, and stated that UCSF would not represent the authors should they be
sued by Knoll. Consequently, Dr. Dong was compelled to contact the journal and ask that the article be removed.
The Journal stated verbally that it would accept the article if it were resubmitted. However, the threat of a lawsuit and UCSFs
refusal to defend its own researchers against such a suit have dissuaded the researchers from resubmitting. Dr. Dong has
sought redress within the UCSF system, but in the Fall of 1995 was denied a hearing on this issue before the universitys
Promotion and Tenure Committee.
In June 1995, the American Journal of Therapeutics, a journal not even listed in the medical journal computer database
MedLine, published an article entitled "Limitations of levothyroxine bioequivalence evaluation: analysis of an attempted study,"
which was based upon the data generated by Dr. Dong and her colleagues (see attached). The authors were two Knoll
employees, Drs. Mayor and Kurtz, and Dr. Tony Orlando of Pharmaco LSR in Austin, TX, who had previously worked for
Knoll. Dr. Mayor is one of two Associate Editors of the American Journal of Therapeutics and also has responsibility for its
endocrinology section. None of the UCSF researchers were included as authors, nor were they included in a lengthy
Acknowledgments section.
This article came to markedly different conclusions from Dr. Dongs paper. Using the same data as those used by the UCSF
researchers, the Knoll researchers assessed thyroid function using two methods: 1) with no correction for baseline values (the
method used by the UCSF researchers); and 2) with correction for baseline values. Correcting for baseline, although
controversial, is not customary in assessing the bioequivalence of drugs that are natural substances produced by the human
body. In diseases such as hypothyroidism, such substances may still be produced by the body, but at lower than normal
levels. Indeed, thyroid hormone production by the thyroid gland is essentially turned off when replacement thyroid hormone is
given. Due to the impossibility of distinguishing the bodys own hormone from that in the drug on chemical assays, baseline
correction can not easily be done. In addition, the complex feedback mechanisms that the body uses to regulate hormone
levels make the uncorrected measurement the one most consistent with how the body actually functions. One result of
inappropriate baseline correction can be negative values for the corrected variables, as occurred in the Knoll paper, a finding
that has no biological meaning.
There are two major reasons for the apparent discrepancy between the two papers: 1) the issue of baseline correction; and 2)
the Knoll paper also included data on another index of thyroid function, TSH, the measurement of which produced most of
the differences between the formulations. TSH would probably not be included in any FDA requirement for establishing the
bioequivalence of levothyroxine. This is because establishing bioequivalence does not require demonstrating that the drug is
effective (this should already have been done by the brand name company); the generic company need only demonstrate that
similar quantities of the drug are released into the blood stream. Thus T4, T3, and free T4 index would very likely be
components of levothyroxine bioequivalence testing, but TSH, which measures levothyroxine effectiveness, would not. The
first analysis came to similar conclusions to Dr. Dong: the formulations "[appeared] to be bioequivalent." The second analysis,
however, resulted in many findings of differences between the four products, suggesting lack of bioequivalence. The article
went on to list in exhaustive detail various purported limitations of the study and, in a highly unusual half-page table, listed these
"major study limitations." The study, the article said, had "encountered numerous and often unpredictable difficulties in
execution" and these difficulties "were too numerous and substantive to consider this a definitive bioequivalence study." The
authors concluded that "the levothyroxine products studied, although appearing to be bioequivalent, were, in fact,
therapeutically inequivalent." The net effect of these statistical manipulations was to call the UCSF papers findings into
question. This would not have been possible had the FDA exercised its authority to adequately regulate levothyroxine,
including establishing clear standards for bioequivalence determination.
In sum, Knoll sponsored a research study and, when it found the conclusions to not be to its taste, embarked upon a
campaign of scientific distortion and legal threats. Six years after the studys completion, and over one year since it passed
peer review in a prestigious medical journal, the investigators manuscript has still not been published, and, due to Knolls
publication of its own self-serving article, may now not be publishable. These events would not have occurred had the FDA
adequately regulated levothyroxine and provided adequate guidelines on bioequivalence determination. The FDA has
essentially permitted the pharmaceutical industry to regulate itself in this area, with predictable consequences. However, the
suppression of these findings, which have enormous implications for the practice of clinical medicine and cost-containment,
would not have occurred had UCSF not failed to review the contract and then succumbed to the gag clause, thereby sounding
a retreat from the time-honored principle of academic freedom. The public has been ill-served by both of these institutions.
Now it is time for the FDA to prevent any further pharmaceutical company manipulation by extending the safety and efficacy
regulations to include drugs marketed prior to 1938. Hundreds of millions of consumer dollars a year are at stake and the
FDA has not taken any action.
This article was taken from a letter of May 29, 1996 by Dr. Peter Lune and Dr. Sidney Wolfe of Public Citizen to Dr. David
Kessler, Commissioner, Food and Drug Administration which was obtained under the Freedom of Information Act. Thanks
to Dr.Lune and Wolfe for this important contribution to public knowledge.
1996
Richard Alexander is a specialist in personal injury litigation with 30 years in-depth experience. Emphasizing working relationships with clients has led to an exceptional record of success. He has served as a member of the Board of Governors of The State Bar of California, President of the Santa Clara County Bar Association and the Board of Governors of Consumer Attorneys of California. He is a founding member of the National Association of Consumer Advocates, and heads Alexander Hawes, LLP.
Alexander Hawes, LLP is a California law firm that specializes in personal injury, wrongful death, and financial losses caused by negligence, defective products, toxic chemicals, corporate misconduct or insurance fraud on behalf of consumers, small investors, injured workers and small businesses. In addition to individual cases the firm prosecutes class actions for large groups of individuals who have suffered financial loss as a result of corporate fraud, defective consumer products, and environmental pollution. The firm holds Martindale-Hubbell's highest rating and is recognized in the List of Preeminent Law Firms in the U. S.