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    Home»Health»Scientists Uncover Shocking Flaws: Investigation Questions Effectiveness of Popular Anti-Platelet Drug
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    Scientists Uncover Shocking Flaws: Investigation Questions Effectiveness of Popular Anti-Platelet Drug

    By BMJ GroupJanuary 1, 20253 Comments4 Mins Read
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    A BMJ investigation highlights data integrity issues in the PLATO trial for ticagrelor, a drug approved by the FDA despite concerns about trial reliability and later failure to replicate positive results. Experts are calling for renewed investigation and a reappraisal of its clinical use.

    Ticagrelor costs the United States over $750 million annually, yet a BMJ investigation casts new doubts on the reliability of the pivotal clinical trial that led to the drug’s approval.

    A new investigation published by The BMJ highlights fresh concerns about the PLATO clinical trial, a pivotal study that led to the global approval of the anti-platelet drug ticagrelor (marketed as Brilinta in the US and Brilique in Europe) by AstraZeneca.

    Peter Doshi, senior editor at The BMJ, has uncovered significant issues with data reporting. His findings are based on primary PLATO trial records and previously unpublished data obtained through a freedom of information request.

    PLATO Trial and Initial Concerns

    The PLATO trial was published in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) in 2009. Assessing over 18,000 patients in 43 countries, investigators reported that ticagrelor reduced deaths from vascular causes, heart attack, or stroke compared with clopidogrel (Plavix). However, in US patients, PLATO’s results showed higher deaths in the ticagrelor group, and AstraZeneca’s first application for FDA approval failed.

    FDA medical officer Thomas Marciniak reviewed AstraZeneca’s resubmission, but called it “the worst in my experience regarding completeness of the submissions and the sponsor responding completely and accurately to requests.” Marciniak became deeply concerned over the basic reliability of PLATO trial data and recommended against approval.

    But the FDA approved ticagrelor over these objections, sparking a long and rancorous dispute over PLATO. However, since the 2011 approval for acute coronary syndrome, a host of other studies have failed to replicate PLATO’s positive results, prompting experts to question its validity and call for a reappraisal of guidelines that recommend ticagrelor.

    Victor Serebruany at Johns Hopkins University was initially impressed by the trial results, but became skeptical after noticing inconsistencies and anomalies in the data and guided a US Justice Department investigation into PLATO in 2013.

    Eric Bates at the University of Michigan, and a co-author of the US guidelines that recommend ticagrelor, also said he was “increasingly disturbed by how trial after trial came out as being not dramatically positive in any way.” Bates is now calling for a reappraisal of ticagrelor’s place in guidelines.

    Others contend that PLATO’s results were not credible from the start, pointing out that ticagrelor fared worse at trial sites monitored by third-party contract research organizations (CROs) than at sites overseen by AstraZeneca.

    PLATO co-chairs Robert Harrington and Lars Wallentin have argued that “there is no reason to suspect an influence of monitoring organization on the study outcomes,” citing an analysis by “two senior academic statisticians.”

    Disparities in Trial Oversight and Reporting

    But The BMJ has found that the cited statistical paper did not analyze overall primary endpoint results for patients at sites monitored by CROs compared with sites monitored by the sponsor, and that the paper was led by AstraZeneca’s former chief statistician without disclosing his former employment.

    The BMJ investigation also reveals discrepancies in the number, causes, and dates of patient deaths provided by PLATO investigators, raising further questions about the accuracy of reporting to the FDA and the possibility of unblinding.

    AstraZeneca declined to be interviewed. A spokesperson said by email that the company has “nothing to add,” and directed The BMJ to its 2014 public statement following the US Department of Justice’s investigation into PLATO. Trial co-chairs Harrington and Wallentin did not respond to The BMJ’s requests for comment.

    The BMJ’s analysis also found omissions in the number of deaths reported in the NEJM paper. The NEJM did not dispute the error and said it would attempt to contact the authors, but added “if we are unable to reach them or they are unable to access the data, we would most likely not proceed with corrections.”

    Fifteen years after PLATO, Serebruany continues to publish critiques, but in an interview with The BMJ, he expressed little hope that scientific levers will resolve questions about data integrity in PLATO.

    The only way forward, in his opinion, is re-engagement from the US Department of Justice. “There are many good people in the justice department and we need to give them another chance to look at the case, issue new civil investigative demands, and stop the flirting, dealing, and wheeling in exchange for future high-profile jobs in big pharma. Then the American people will receive justice.”

    Reference: “Doubts over landmark heart drug trial: ticagrelor PLATO study” by Peter Doshi, 11 December 2024, BMJ.
    DOI: 10.1136/bmj.q2550

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    3 Comments

    1. Boba on January 2, 2025 5:15 am

      AstraZeneca are murderers. The whole corporation should be shut down and the CEOs imprisoned.

      Reply
      • Brian on January 2, 2025 9:17 am

        If the Fda wasn’t corrupt, pharmaceutical and food companies wouldn’t be able to screw the people. Unfortunately we the people are in deep sleep.

        Reply
    2. stephen schaffer on January 2, 2025 11:17 am

      Is this the same complaint we have heard for many decades? That the FDA allows big pharma to do the research on the effectiveness and safety of their own products?

      Reply
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