|
|
 |
 |
Health
After suicide, drugmaker alters study
By Associated Press
Published March 6, 2004
INDIANAPOLIS - Eli Lilly and Co. said Friday that it will lengthen the withdrawal period used to wean participants in a drug study off an experimental medication after the suicide of a 19-year-old woman taking part in the tests.
Lilly required mental health evaluations of test subjects after the Feb. 7 suicide of Indiana college student Traci Johnson. Some participants complained of sleeplessness, anxiety or nervousness during their withdrawal from duloxetine, a drug Lilly is testing for two uses: depression and stress urinary incontinence. But the company has said none reported symptoms that suggested a suicide risk.
Indianapolis-based Lilly has now doubled the tapering period for the drug to eight days.
"We did find people who were uncomfortable," said John Hayes, a clinical psychiatrist who leads Lilly's development team for duloxetine. "We were also addressing peace of mind and taking the most conservative approach."
Hayes said there is no evidence that longer tapering periods make people more comfortable, but the change seemed "reasonable and prudent."
"We didn't have anyone who said, "Thank God you're going to take a longer time to taper it,"' he said. "Many of the subjects felt fine in the study."
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is reviewing Johnson's death. A coroner's report released this week did not cite the drug as a factor in her suicide.
Lilly has said it does not believe the drug led to the suicide, but critics say people going off antidepressants often have a higher risk of suicide.
[Last modified March 6, 2004, 01:35:41]
World and national headlines
Obituaries of note
Africa fertile for terrorist havens
Bin Laden has a soft side, Canadian documentary says
Election 2004Nice-guy primary leaves Kerry open for attack
Pro-Democrats group advertises in Spanish
Haiti3,000 supporters march for Aristide in Haiti
HealthAfter suicide, drugmaker alters study
Flour additive linked to longer life
IraqLate hitch blocks Iraqi constitution
Violence steals comfort, not zeal, from mission
Nation in briefStorms in Texas, Oklahoma could hit $10-million mark
Washington in briefJudge keeps abortion files private
World in briefBlair: Fight terrorism more aggressively

© 2006 • All Rights Reserved • St. Petersburg Times
490 First Avenue South St. Petersburg, FL 33701 727-893-8111
|
|
 |