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Maker of Viagra stops testing drug on women

By Associated Press
Published February 29, 2004

NEW YORK - Pfizer Inc. is ending research on whether the anti-impotency drug Viagra can be used to treat female sexual problems, as studies on women were inconclusive, the company said.

The results of several clinical studies involving about 3,000 women did not support a regulatory filing, Pfizer said Friday.

Karen Katen, executive vice president of Pfizer and president of Pfizer Global Pharmaceuticals, said that while the company was disappointed that the program was not more successful, "this is the nature of drug development."

"We make substantial financial investments, marshal the talents of our best scientists and clinicians, and spend years studying potential treatments only to find that they do not meet the requirements for regulatory approval," Katen said.

Experts agree that female sexuality is more complex than male sexuality, involving psychological and physical factors.

At least 10 pharmaceutical companies have sought to develop a female equivalent for Viagra since the drug was launched in 1998 as a treatment for male sexual disfunction.

More than 23-million men have been prescribed Viagra since then, Pfizer said.

Pfizer said it began researching into whether Viagra would work for women in 1996 and is studying other treatment approaches.

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