By Ralph Tarantino, PhDPharmaceutical Consultant and Principal, SteriTech Solutions, LLCMiddletown, NJ
The FDA’s most recent response to the anti-cancer drug shortage crisis may be a perfect example of “too little, too late.” What follows will not be a rant about offshore outsourcing or the regulatory climate in general. However, the FDA decision (See FDA’s Press Release regarding shortages of anti-cancer drugs here) to allow Sun Pharma’s version of Doxil (doxorubicin HCl liposome injection) into the United States to replace the approved Ben Venue product may be a dangerous one for patients with ovarian cancer.
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By Ralph Tarantino, PhD
Pharmaceutical Consultant and Principal, SteriTech Solutions, LLCMiddletown, NJ
A recent analysis of the CDC’s National Ambulatory Medical Care Surveys (Health Aff. 2011;30:1434) showed that 4 out of 5 prescribers of antidepressants are not psychiatrists. Alarmed? You should be.
White, female patients over the age of 50 with some form of health coverage are the usual recipients of this treatment. Frequently, they have other chronic illnesses, and for many no true diagnosis of depression exists. As a culture we have been bombarded with the warning that “depression is a serious medical condition”; it’s a warning that should be heeded. The costs of depression with regard to human life, the health care system, and the economy in general are enormous.
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By Ralph Tarantino, PhD
Pharmaceutical Consultant and Principal, SteriTech Solutions, LLCMiddletown, NJ
Most would agree that mapping of the human genome during the last few years of the 20th century was a key technological advance in a century that saw the most technological advances in history. Knowledge of the human genome makes pharmacogenomics possible, and pharmacogenomics makes personalized medicines possible. Personalized medicine—hype not withstanding—is a model for pharmacotherapeutics that cannot be ignored by those interested in advancements in the treatment of disease. It most often refers to use of an individual’s genetic information to optimize treatment or prevent disease for that individual. Crizotinib (Xalkori) and vemurafenib (Zelboraf) are notable personalized medicines approved by the FDA in 2011.
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By Ralph Tarantino, PhD
Pharmaceutical Consultant and Principal, SteriTech Solutions, LLCMiddletown, NJ
It wasn’t all that long ago that generic drugs were the exception rather than the rule. On expiration of the innovator’s patent, there would be a somewhat gradual decline in sales due to generic competition, but a loyal following of prescribers and patients would keep the product afloat for a few years. Their faith in the brand name would be buoyed by the know-how behind the product, the innovator’s history of success, and the knowledge that there was a best-in-the-field staff of scientists and technologists who made the product possible. It was good decision making. Drug product choice is a very important decision.
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