Philip Morris
M-D-D-I Reports - 'the Gray Sheet'
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- Document File
- 2046936725/2046937271/Missing
- Litigation
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- Abc
- Ambu Intl
- Birtcher Medical
- FDA, Food and Drug Administration
- Gynopharma
- Hhs, Dept of Health and Human Services
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- Journal of the American Medical Assn
- Office for the Protection From Researc R
- Office of Device Evaluation
- Office of Drug Evaluation I
- Plexux Intl
- Small Business Regulation Subcomm
- Univ of Mn Minneapolis
- 20 20
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- 2046936726/6992
Related Documents:- 2046936726 Table of Contents
- 2046936727 A
- 2046936728-6731 FDA's Legally Suspect Actions Invite Challenge
- 2046936732-6735 FDA Paralysis Raises Health Care Costs
- 2046936736-6739 the Real Problem with Health Care in America: While Dr. David Kessler's FDA Fiddles, Medical Approvals Lag and Americans Die
- 2046936740-6743 What the FDA Doesn't Want You to Know Could Kill You
- 2046936744-6751
- 2046936752-6759
- 2046936760-6762 Guide to Medical Device Regulation FDA Issues First Warning Letter Citing Gmp Problems Under New Cpg
- 2046936763-6766 the Vitamin Uprising
- 2046936767-6780 Losing the Edge Overseas Patients Reap the Benefits of U.S.Research While Those Here Wait
- 2046936781-6783 Losing the Edge
- 2046936784 Feds: Toughen Regulation, Promote Research Improvements Needed, and They Are on the Way
- 2046936785-6786
- 2046936787-6789 Challenging FDA Authority
- 2046936790-6793 Speakeasies in A New Age of Prohibition
- 2046936794-6798 Who Is Happiest Politician in Washington Over Whitewater? Alfonse D'amato - Newt Gingrich - David Kessler?
- 2046936799-6800 Pro-Free Enterprise Group Challenges FDA's Authority to Regulate Drug Companies' Speech
- 2046936801-6802 Wlf Off-Label Use Suit Heats Up
- 2046936803-6805 Just Call Me 'doc'
- 2046936806-6810 Food and Drugs and Politics
- 2046936811-6813 Science and Technology Getting the Lead Out
- 2046936814 Forbes Fear of Falling 5 Ways to Protect Yourself in Scary Times
- 2046936815-6816 Book Burning
- 2046936817 If A Murderer Kills You, It's Homicide If A Drunk Driver Kills You, It's Manslaughter If the FDA Kills You, It's Just Being Cautious
- 2046936818-6820 Frustration for Medical Innovators
- 2046936821 Block That Innovation
- 2046936822-6823 Getting Even
- 2046936824-6826 Biotech Pipeline: Bottleneck Ahead
- 2046936827-6829 Consuming Interest Are We Safe From the FDA?
- 2046936830-6839 Saying Yes to Drugs Policy Analysis
- 2046936840-6858 Deadly Overcaution: FDA's Drug Approval Process
- 2046936859 B
- 2046936860-6861 Litigation Update Wlf Wins Suit Against FDA to Stop Overregulation of Heart Valves (Washington Legal Foundation V. Shalala)
- 2046936862-6863 Litigation Update Wlf Opposes FDA Efforts to Dismiss First Amendment Lawsuit (Washington Legal Foundation V. Kessler)
- 2046936864-6867 Dickinson's FDA Review
- 2046936868-6869 Wlf Urges Appeals Court to Enjoin Federal Policy Restricting Human Heart Valve Transplant (Washington Legal Foundation V. Shalala)
- 2046936870-6871 FDA Problems Slow US Andas
- 2046936872-6873 Taking the Heat An Aids Patient Champions A Risky Blood Treatment Banned in the U.S.
- 2046936874-6876 New Study Says Breast Implants Are Not A Health Risk
- 2046936877-6878 Wlf Sues FDA to Overturn Policy Restricting Information on Off-Labels Uses of Approved Drugs and Devices (Washington Legal Foundation V. Shalala)
- 2046936879 Ex-Inspector of F.D.A. Is Convicted of Bribery
- 2046936879A FDA Has No Position Yet
- 2046936882 FDA Halts Test on Device That Shows Promise for the Victims of Cardiac Arrest
- 2046936883 Law Concerning Medical Devices Is Often Ignored
- 2046936884 Dairies, Drugs and Accusations
- 2046936884A FDA to Launch Campaign on New Labels for Food
- 2046936885 Probe of Three FDA Officials Sought Industry Ties Before Approval of Bovine Growth Hormone Are at Issue
- 2046936886-6889 Safety First How A Device to Aid in Breast Self-Exams If Kept Off the Market Other Nations Approved It But U.S. Demands Proof Simple Pad Isn't Risky Nine Year Battle with the FDA
- 2046936890-6892 Who Will Regulate the Regulators? If You Make A Mistake, Shouldn't You Own Up? Not If You're the FDA, Epa, or Ftc
- 2046936893-6894 None - A - Day Is the FDA Out to Take Your Vitamin?
- 2046936895 Will A New Government Program Net the Bad Fish?
- 2046936896-6897 FDA Responds to Wlf Petition Regarding Off-Label Drug Use by Indefinitely Postponing Issuance of Regulatory Guidelines
- 2046936898-6905 FDA Research: Overview
- 2046936906-6910 Government Report Finds Levels Safe Pesticide Residues in Your Children's Food
- 2046936911-6912 Wlf Urges FDA to Rescind Policy Restricting Information Flow on Off-Label Uses of Approved Drugs and Devices
- 2046936913 Regulatory Chokehold FDA Red Tape Dooms Transplant Drug
- 2046936914 FDA Called Lax in Overseeing Medical Sterilizers, Disinfectants
- 2046936915 FDA Sets Labeling Rules for Dietary Supplements Nutritional Data, Support for Health Claims Required
- 2046936916 Chemicals That Taint Seafood Concerns Continue Over Safety of Methylmercury Inspection Processes
- 2046936917 Lifesaving Devices Languish at the FDA
- 2046936918-6919 Wlf Sues FDA to Enjoin Federal Policy Restricting Human Heart Valve Transplants (Washington Legal Foundation V. Shalala)
- 2046936920 What's in Food? Answers Differ at 2 Agencies Manufacturers Fight to Keep FDA Label Rules From Encroaching on Ftc Ad Rules
- 2046936921 Reform the FDA
- 2046936922 Legal Beat FDA Approval Shield Firms in Injury Suits
- 2046936923 Water From A Bottle
- 2046936924 Commentary FDA and Our Split Medical Persona
- 2046936925-6926 FDA Assailed for Slow Testing of New Drugs
- 2046936927 Andrews Office Products Capitol Heights, Md (K)
- 2046936928-6947 Statement by David A. Kessler, M.D. Commissioner of Food and Drugs Before the Committee on Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Health and the Environment U.S. House of Representatives
- 2046936948-6961 Filthy Food,Dubious Drugs, and Defective Devices: the Legacy of FDA's Antiquated Statute A Staff Report
- 2046936962-6968 Gao Reports on FDA-Related Topics 860000 to Present
- 2046936969 D
- 2046936970-6985 Statement by Louis W. Sullivan, M.D. Secretary of Health and Human Services Before the Committee on Labor and Human Resources U.S. Senate on the Final Report of the Advisory Committee on the FDA
- 2046936986-6992 Proposed Remarks of Dr. Charles Edwards Before the Senate Committee on Labor and Human Resources
- Named Person
- Alpert, S.
- Cleveland
- Ellis, G.
- Lurie, K.
- Olsen, C.
- Pendergast, M.
- Temple, R.
- Wyden, R.
- Cleveland
- Author (Organization)
- Fdc Reports
- Request
- Stmn/R1-072
- Stmn/R1-079
- Date Loaded
- 05 Jun 1998
- UCSF Legacy ID
- lnn65e00
Document Images
?fJ
M-D-D-I REPORTS -"T'he Gray Sheet" May 23, 1994
Noting Birtcher's efforts to make the company more lean, Cleveland said, "Our job now is to assure
that the size of our operating structure matches our sales potential and to put the financing in
place
to regain the confidence of our suppliers and maintain the loyalty of our customers.... When we have
achieved that potential, I have every confidence that Birtcher Medical and its product iines will be
attractive acquisition candidates that will return value to its shareholders."
AMBU CARDIOPUMP "APPEARS MORE EFFECTIVE" FOR CERTAIN CPR PATIENTS, Keith Lurie, MD, University of
Minnesota, Minneapolis, et al.
conclude in a study published in the May 11 Journal of the American Medical Association. According
to Lurie
er al., active compression-decompression cardiopulmonary resuscitation (ACD CPR) using the
Cardiopump "appears
to be more effective than standard CPR in a well-defined subset of victims of out-of-hospital
cardiac arrests during
the critical initial phases of resuscitation."
ACD CPR was found to be "significantly more effective" than standard CPR in patients with down-
times - the duration of time between collapse and the initiation of CPR - of less than four minutes.
More than 80% of the patients had a return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) after ACD CPR com-
pared with 33% after standard CPR (p<.01), and 73% of the patients were admitted to intensive care
units (ICU) after ACD CPR compared with 33% after standard CPR (p<.05), the study says.
The prospective, randomized parallel-group study involved 130 out-of-hospital arrests over a
10-month
period in St. Paul, Minnesota. Patients were all normothermic victims of nontraumatic cardiac arrest
older than eight years who received CPR. Seventy-seven of the patients received standard CPR and
53 received ACD CPR. The main outcome measures for the study were: ROSC, admission to ICU,
return of baseline neurological function (alert and oriented to person, place and time), survival to
hospital discharge, survival to hospital discharge with return of baseline neurological function,
and
complications.
For the total patient group, a higher percentage of patients who received ACD
CPR had an ROSC and were admitted to the ICU compared to standard CPR
(45% vs 31%, and 40% vs 26%, respectively), "but these trends were not sta-
tistically significant (p<.10 and p<.10)," Lurie et al. report.
For other outcome measures, the study reveals "no statistically significant differences" between ACD
CPR and standard CPR: hospital discharge rates (23% vs 17%), return to baseline neurological func-
tion (19% vs 17%), and return to baseline neurological function at hospital discharge (17% vs 16%).
Complication rates in patients admitted to the hospital were similar in both groups, although a
"signifi-
cant increase in localized hematomas" was noticed for patients receiving ACD CPR The contact point
between the Cardiopump and the chest wall was "redesigned to reduce this minor problem," according
to the investigators.
The authors note that "evaluation of any type of CPR efficacy is dependent on the effectiveness and
structure" of the entire emergency medical services system, and that response times and training of
EMS personnel and the general population "may contribute to the potential benefits of ACD CPR
observed in St. Paul." The likelihood of treatment assignment errors - using standard CPR instead of
an additional piece of equipment - also remains "a potential problem" for any study evaluating an
alternative method of CPR. Despite these variables, Lurie et al. recommend that "a larger study
should
be performed to evaluate the potential long-term benefits of ACD CPR."
~
> FDA halted the study in May 1993 after determining the Cardiopump was a significant risk device ~
which lacked an approved investigational device exemption. The device, which is manufactured in ~
® F-D-C Reports, Inc., 1994. Photocopying without permission is strictly prohibited. See Page
One. ~
Multiple copy rate: $315 when mailed in the same envelope with $630 subscription. GO
~

Msr 23, 1994 M-D-D-I REPORTS - "The Gray Sheet" - 31 -
Glostrup, Denmark by Ambu International, was placed on automatic import detention on Apri129 as
a Class III device without appropriate -premarket approval.
The agency became aware of the Cardiopump study when Ambu submitted a 510(k) for the device
in April 1993. The company planned to resubmit the 510(k) in November of that year after FDA
requested study data be expanded from 250 to 500 patients ("The Gray Sheet" Nov. 29, 1993, p. 6).
The 510(k) is still pending, according to Ambu.
In reviewing the company's studies, FDA has identified several areas of
concern. For example, the agency is troubled by the investigators' waiving
informed consent of patients at the time of treatment. In addition, the agency
also questions whether randomization provisions in the studies were adequate
to eliminate bias and whether patients were evaluated consistently.
In an editorial accompanying the JAMA study, Carin Olsen, MD, calls the issue of prospective
informed consent "problematic" for research in areas such as resuscitation, severe head injury and
drug
overdose. He adds that FDA's criteria for exception from informed consent "prevents the application
to resuscitation research comparing investigational therapy to standard care, whose relative
effective-
ness is unknown."
Furthermore, Olsen notes that various methods clinicians have developed for dealing with informed
consent difficulties - including "deferred consent, compassionate use, [and] implied consent" - are
not recognized under FDA regulations. Despite the widespread use of these methods for years, the
agency "noticed only recently that some mechanisms do not follow the letter of the federal code" and
halted those not meeting its regulations, according to Olsen. Currently, he says the agency's Office
of Device Evaluation only "is accepting research protocols in which patients consent at hospital
admission."
Olsen contends that "the problem is that current regulations do tiot relate to resuscitation
research in
humans." He recommends federal regulatory agencies "develop mechanisms" to protect patients' rights
"while permitting and promoting research that is legal as well as ethical."
> The Cardiopump study likely will be discussed at a House Small Business/Regulation Subcommittee
hearing scheduled for May 23, according to subcommittee staffers. The subcommittee hearing, chaired
by Rep. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), will focus on informed consent in emergency room settings. HHS wit-
nesses on the agenda include Gary Ellis, director of the Office for the Protection from Research
Risks;
FDA Deputy Commissioner Mary Pendergast; Susan Alpert, MD, PhD, acting director of FDA's Office
of Device Evaluation; and Robert Temple, director of the Office of Drug Evaluation I.
.... IN BRIEF.. . .
GynoPharma's Paragarct. FDA approves labeling change extending use of the intrauterine copper
contraceptive
from eight to ten years, GynoPharma says, making Paragard `viable for twice as many years as any
other avail-
able reversible contraceptive.' Other labeling changes include additional data on the risk of pelvic
inflammatory
disease associated with intrauterine devices....
Plexus International: Receives May 4 warning letter from FDA for promotional claims of the company's
Myo-
Plex6000 muscle stimulator. Statements that the Myo-Plex provides "[r]elief of pain; removal of
edema; muscle
relaxation; rehabilitation of injured tissues"; and other claims,'extend beyond the original
intended use of a
muscle stimulator,'the agency contends. Plexus also is cited for failing to submit the necessary
premarket noti-
fication for the device. The Houston, Texas-based company is the subject of an investigation by the
ABC
television show 20/20....
c F-D-C Reports, Inc., 1994. Photocopying without permission is strictly prohibited. See Page One.
Multiple copy rate: $315 when mailed in the same envelope with $630 subscription.
