VA Orders New Drug Protocols in Wake of Chantix Debate
By AARON KATERSKY and RYAN SIBLEY
July 9, 2008
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SHARE The Department of Veterans Affairs promised today to review drug protocols for combat veterans with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. The Secretary of the VA, James Peake, appeared before Congress today to answer questions about why his administration continued to recruit veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan for studies of pharmaceutical drugs linked to suicide and other violent side-effects. The controversial tests were the subject of an ABC News/ Washington Times investigation last month.
VA Secretary James Peake said he is ordering a full review of drug protocols for PTSD vets in the...
VA Secretary James Peake said he is ordering a full review of drug protocols for PTSD vets in the wake of an ABC News/ Washington Times investigation into veterans who were recruited for studies using pharmaceutical drugs linked to suicide and other violent side-effects.
(ABC News Photo Illustration)Today, before the House Committee on Veterans' Affairs, Peake said his department will now review all drugs prescribed by the VA to veterans with PTSD. Part of that review will be to examine the risks of medications on PTSD vets and to review proper notification procedures.
In one of the human experiments at the VA involving the anti-smoking drug Chantix, VA doctors waited more than three months after a statement was issued by the Food and Drug Administration before warning veterans about the possible serious side-effects, including suicide and neuropsychiatric behavior.
Peake said following the initial ABC News/ Washington Times report that letters would be sent to 32,000 veterans informing them that they are using a drug linked to suicide or violent behavior. Peake has said he "wished" the VA had not taken so long to warn veterans being used in the Chantix test. Today he reiterated his commitment to drug research using veterans.
"I commit to veterans, and to you, that I will be comprehensive and thorough in my investigations of how this study has been, and is being, conducted," Peake said in his statement to the committee. "I am determined that VA will remain a leader in the protection of human subjects and in veteran-centric research."
Committee chair Bob Filner (D-Ca) asked Peake repeatedly why the Chantix study hasn't been ceased.
"Why don't you just stop?" asked Rep. Filner, "if you know the drug induces suicidal thoughts?"
Lt. Col. Roger Charles (Ret.) who is now with the organization Soldiers for Truth said that giving Chantix to vets with PTSD is the equivalent of "mental health roulette".
Chantix has been linked to at least 40 suicides and 400 attempted suicides in the population at large, according to the FDA which published its first alert about the potential dangers of the drug on Nov. 20, 2007.
The FDA issued a second warning, and there was an alert from the drug's maker, Pfizer, before the VA finally began to warn veterans in the study on Feb. 29, 2008.
But even then, the VA omitted the word "suicide" from the cover letter sent to veterans.
Peake said the new VA warning letter he is sending will specify that suicide is one of the possible side-effects of Chantix.
Pfizer has maintained that the drug's benefits outweigh the risks and that it continues to do further studies on the drug.
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Tip of the hat to Larry Meirow on this story
Friday, July 11, 2008
VA Orders New Drug Protocols in Wake of Chantix Debate
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