Title: DirecttoConsumer Prescription Drug Promotion
1Direct-to-Consumer Prescription Drug Promotion
- Nancy M. Ostrove, Ph.D.
- Division of Drug Marketing, Advertising, and
Communications - Food and Drug Administration
2Overview
- What we know
- law
- history
- stakeholder concerns
- enforcement problem areas
- consumer/patient perceptions
- What we dont know
- broad effects on the public health
3Background Facts
- No laws or regulations ever prohibited promoting
prescription drugs to consumers - Law requires advertisements to include
information in brief summary about products
risks and benefits - Law generally prohibits preclearance
4Types of Advertisements - 1
- Help-seeking (See your doctor, disease
oriented) - these are not drug ads
5Types of Advertisements - 2
- Reminder
- regulations specifically exempt from disclosure
requirements - include name of product, but no representations
beyond dosage form and packaging, price
information - designed to remind knowledgeable persons of
existence of product
6Types of Advertisements - 3
- Product-claim -- includes
- name and quantitative information
- product use (indication)
- optionally, other substantiated claims
- risk disclosure (requirements vary as a function
of whether print or broadcast)
7Law Focuses on Content of Ads
- Cant be false or misleading
- Must present fair balance between benefits and
risk information - Cant omit material facts
- Plain language meaning Ads must communicate
an accurate and balanced picture of the product
8If the law allowed ads to be directed to
consumers, why didnt we see them until
relatively recently?
9Things Changed
- Consumer empowerment
- desire for involvement in own care
- active information seeking
- Aging baby-boomer population
- selves, children, parents
- Managed Care
- Increasing focus on First Amendment
10Evolution of DTC
- Up to 1980s -- learned intermediary only
- 1983 - 1985 -- voluntary moratorium
- 1985 - regulations provide sufficient safeguards
to protect consumers - 1990s - steady increases in print promotion
- mid 1990s - broadcast increasingly enters mix
11Broadcast Environment
- Static -- sponsor uncertainty regarding
requirement for brief summary - Adequate provision for providing labeling
always allowed - FDA never gave guidance on how to
- Major risks required to be disclosed regardless
of mechanism
12Result was a confusing broadcast environment --
more and more uninformative reminder
advertisements
13Adequate Provision Guidance
- How to reach diverse group of consumers?
- Sponsors had some suggestions
- 1997 draft gave possible approach, finalized in
1999 - reference to health care provider
- print ads/brochures
- telephone contact number
- internet site
14Perspectives
15Stakeholder Perspectives - 1
- DTC is good -- FDA should not over-regulate
- PhRMA, individual pharmaceutical sponsors
- ad agencies and associations
- communications groups
- media providers (print, TV, radio, internet)
- Federal Trade Commission (FTC)
16Stakeholder Perspectives - 2
- Mixed bag -- DTC may have some benefits but FDA
should strictly regulate - some consumer/patient groups (e.g., National
Consumers League) - some health care professional associations (AMA,
ACP/ASIM, APhA) - generally want FDA to preapprove promotional
materials
17Stakeholder Perspectives - 3
- DTC is bad -- should be stopped
- some consumer groups (e.g., Public Citizen,
Center for Medical Consumers, National Womens
Health Network) - managed care (AMCP)
- historically, generic manufacturers
- Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA)
18Focus of Arguments
- Patient-physician interaction/relationship
- Prescribing behavior
- Patient knowledge about drugs
- Product costs
19Current Situation
- Close surveillance and quick enforcement
- Encourage compliance -- cooperate with voluntary
requests for pre-review and comment - Assessing impact
20Enforcement
- Product efficacy claims
- broadening indication, patient population
- overstating or guaranteeing efficacy
- implying use without disclosing risk
- Disclosure of product risks
- content
- presentation (minimization fair balance)
- Adequate provision mechanism
21What is DTCs Impact?
- Little research until relatively recently
- cost concerns (correlational analyses)
- effects on physician/patient relationship
(self-report surveys) - FDA, Prevention, TIME Inc., NCL, AARP
- effects on patients knowledge about drugs
(experimental designs, surveys) - effects on prescribing behavior (?)
22FDAs Research
- Patient/Physician interaction
- is DTC influencing patient behavior?
- 2000 - national survey of patients behaviors and
attitudes - www.fda.gov/cder/ddmac/research.htm
23Methodology
- National probability sample
- focus on patients visiting doctor in last 3
months about a problem of their own - Telephone interview (n1,081)
- Final sample
- 960 who had seen doctor in last 3 months
- 121 who had not
24Demographics
- More females than males especially among those
who had seen a doctor - 65 vs. 55
- Similar ethnicity and overall education among
those who had and had not seen a doctor
25Self-Reported Health
26Do Respondents Recall Seeing Advertisements?
- Asked whether they had seen an advertisement for
a prescription drug in last 3 months - 72 of those who had seen a doctor
- 69 of those who had not seen a doctor
- Not inconsistent with 1999 Prevention survey
- 81 had seen an ad (no time limit)
27Where Was Advertisement Seen or Heard?
(Multiple responses accepted)
94
66
29
28
17
9
n 688
28What Information is Recalled from TV Ads?
n688
29Information Seeking in Response to an Ad
51
41
Has an ad for a prescription drug ever caused you
to look for more information, for example, about
the drug or about your health?
30Sources of Information Cited
- Mostly from health care professionals
- own doctor (81), pharmacist (52), nurse
(33) - Reference book (36)
- Friend, neighbor, or relative (30)
- Toll-free number, internet (both 18)
- Other print sources (magazine - 14, newspaper -
7)
31How Many Read the Brief Summary?
n688
32What if Especially Interested in the Product?
n688
33Patient/Physician Interaction?
- Patients report seeing their doctors for the
traditional reasons - time for checkup (53)
- feeling ill (42)
- had symptoms (41)
- DTC not directly causing large numbers of visits
- read/saw something (2)
34DTC Encouraging Discussion?
Has an ad ever caused you to ask a doctor about a
medical condition or illness you hadnt
previously talked about?
35Awareness Influences Asking
36How Did Doctor React?
81
79
71
4
Which of these possible reactions did your doctor
have when you asked about the drug?
n
220
37Feelings About Doctors Reaction
n220
38What Did Doctor Do?
50
32
29
15
14
12
Did your doctor do one or more of the following?
n 220
39Reason(s) Given for Not Prescribing Drug
- For 59 who didnt get requested drug prescribed,
the doctor said why (n65) - not right for patient 48
- wanted patient to take different drug 35
- side effects patient didnt know 29
- patient didnt have condition 23
- patient didnt need prescription drug 20
- patient could use OTC drug 12
- less expensive drug available 8
40Trend Data
- Annual national telephone surveys by Prevention
magazine since 1997 - No change in percentage of patients asking about
a specific prescription medicine as function of
DTC promotion - despite large increases in funding of DTC
promotion and in television advertising
41DTC-Related Attitudes - 1(among patients)
- Prescription drug advertisements
- help make me aware of new drugs 86
- give enough information for me to decide whether
I should discuss with MD 70 - help me have better discussions with my MD about
my health 62 - Ads make it seem like a MD is not needed to
decide if drug is right for me 24
42DTC-Related Attitudes - 2(among patients)
- Prescription drug advertisements
- help me make better decisions about my
health 47 - make the drugs seem better than they really are
58 - do not give enough information about
- possible benefits and positive effects 49
- possible risks and negative effects 59
43Summary
- Patients visiting doctors for traditional reasons
- time for checkup, symptoms, feeling ill
- DTC not causing large numbers of visits
- DTC appears to work
- awareness associated with discussing prescription
medicine/specific brand with doctor - prompts information-seeking and asking about
conditions not previously discussed
44Summary
- Patients think doctors reacting well to
discussion about specific products - Patients think doctors denying products where
appropriate many doctors providing reasons for
denial - Patients see benefits as well as risks associated
with DTC advertisements
45Limitations of Existing Research
- Survey data self-report -- subject to recall and
other biases - Correlational data subject to causality problem
- Experimental studies to date focused on narrow
issues of knowledge of particular products --
used small samples - Meaning of content analyses?
46Remaining Questions
- Regarding public health Is DTC causing health
care professionals to prescribe inappropriately? - Regarding regulation How can DTC ads best
communicate drugs relative benefits and risks