Please Read this! Statin "Scientists"

<<< Back to main document

Day-Old Fish
Health Sciences Institute e-Alert
Thursday July 29, 2004

Dear Reader,

Late at night, when things get quiet and just the sounds of crickets waft through the open windows, if you ever hear an exasperated howling in the distance, that's probably me as I browse through some of the day's latest health news.

My most recent howling was prompted by a report on some new guidelines for the treatment of high-risk heart patients.

The updated guidelines come from the National Cholesterol Education Program (NCEP), so without even reading the first word you already know what they're going to say: Low LDL cholesterol has to be pushed even lower.

NCEP is part of the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, which is part of the National Institutes of Health. And the guidelines have been endorsed by the American College of Cardiology and the American Heart Association. (The guidelines were published in a recent issue of Circulation - an AHA publication.)

In other words: We're talking DEEP medical mainstream here. How deep? Way down deep where the drug money flows.

-----------------------------------------------------------
How low can you go? -----------------------------------------------------------

In 2001 the NCEP panel of experts said that heart patients who are at very high risk should do whatever it takes (that is: take statin drugs) to get their LDL cholesterol down to 100. Now, after reviewing five studies conducted since 2001, the panel has revised the ideal target for LDL. Now it needs to be 70! At this rate, by the year 2010 they'll be recommending an LDL of 10.

Think I'm joking? Just wait six years.

The new recommendations suggest that statin drugs should be used in nearly all high-risk patients whose LDL is over 100. The lead author of the guidelines - Dr. Scott Grundy - told the Associated Press that three years ago there were about 36 million people "who could benefit from drugs to lower their cholesterol." Dr. Grundy guesses that the new guidelines might increase that number by "a few million."

So if you happen to be the executive of a large drug company that manufactures statin drugs... well! These new recommendations are like Christmas in July! But pharmaceutical execs know that there's no Santa Claus. And they know that big, beautiful gifts don't just magically appear under the tree. Someone has to put them there.

---------------------------------------------------------------
Visions of sugarplums ---------------------------------------------------------------

The release of the NCEP guidelines was not accompanied by a financial disclosure statement for the panelists. But just days after the release, Newsday (a Long Island, NY, newspaper) reported that some of the panelists had ties to drug companies. In response to a call for disclosure, NCEP officials posted a statement on their web site. And the details are eye-opening, to say the least.

Pfizer is the maker of the statin Lipitor, the world's best selling drug. Seven of the nine NCEP panelists have financial connections to Pfizer. And five of them have served as consultants to Pfizer. Nice, huh? But if you think that smells fishy, it's just the tip of the day-old fish bin.

Merck is the maker of Zocor, another very popular statin. Seven of the nine panelists have financial connections to Merck. Four of them have served as consultants to Merck.

Only one of the panelists had no financial connections to any drug company. The other eight have received research grants or honoraria for speaking engagements from Bayer, Glaxo Smith Kline, Johnson & Johnson, AstraZeneca, Novartis, and more than half a dozen other drug companies. And most of these companies manufacture statin drugs.

Hear that howling in the distance? That's me.

---------------------------------------------------------------
No quarrels
---------------------------------------------------------------

The acting director of the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, Dr. Barbara Alving, defended the panelists' drug company connections, telling Newsday that the top experts would naturally have contact with companies that develop drugs within their fields of expertise. She said that individuals who don't have ties to drug companies, "are probably not the experts in the field."

Hmm. I wonder how Dr. James Cleeman felt when he read that?

Dr. Cleeman - coordinator of the NCEP - is the only panelist with no financial ties to any drug companies. So in Dr. Alving's estimation, Dr. C. apparently doesn't qualify as an expert. But in my opinion he's a stand-up guy for resisting an all-expense-paid first-class ticket on the drug company gravy train.

But that doesn't mean that Dr. Cleeman is on the right track. Addressing the initial lack of financial disclosure, Dr. Cleeman dismissed it as procedural blip, a simple oversight that doesn't compromise the recommendations of the panel. Dr. Cleeman told WebMD that the public shouldn't be diverted from the importance of lowering LDL cholesterol, adding that, "Nobody is quarreling with the substance of the message."

Nobody!? Does he mean nobody on the panel? Or nobody at the NCEP? Or nobody at Pfizer? He certainly can't mean that nobody AT ALL quarrels with the message. Because there are many who quarrel long and loud with the basic concept that low cholesterol is the primary key to heart health. Because it isn't. It's not even close. In fact, there is a lot of evidence that the real danger is letting your cholesterol get too low.

------------------------------------------------------------------
This you won't believe ------------------------------------------------------------------

In an e-Alert next week, I'll take a look at the "substance of the message," of the recommendations - and we'll get some dissenting views.

We'll also hear again from Dr. Cleeman who made a comment about cholesterol that's nothing less than flabbergasting, especially coming from the coordinator of the National Cholesterol Education Program. And we'll check in with HSI Panelist Allan Spreen, M.D., for some tips on ways to address high-risk heart problems naturally.

Stay tuned.

WHICH OF YOUR LOVED ONES WILL DIE YOUNG?

Your friends and family take care of their health... see their doctors regularly... try to eat well and exercise... believe in the power of natural healing and take all the latest vitamins and nutritional supplements. They are trying hard to do everything right.

Yet, some will outlive others by at least 20 active years. It's not genetics. It's not luck...

Read on... (if you can't open here use the HTML links listed below)

Sources:

"Implications of Recent Clinical Trials for the National Cholesterol Education Program Adult Treatment Panel III Guidelines" Circulation, Vol. 110, No. 2, 7/13/04, circ.ahajournals.org "New Guidelines for Heart Disease Patients" The Associated Press, 7/12/04, msnbc.com

"Statin Recommenders' Drugmaker Ties" Delthia Ricks, Newsday, 7/20/04, newsday.com

"Development of the Adult Treatment Panel III Update" National Cholesterol Education Program, nhlbi.nih.gov

"Government Group's Drug Ties Not Disclosed" Salynn Boyles, WebMD, my.webmd.com

"Plant Food combo Offers Higher Cancer Protection" NutraIngredients.com, 7/19/04, nutraingredients.com

Copyright (c)1997-2004 by www.hsibaltimore.com, L.L.C. The e-Alert may not be posted on commercial sites without written permission.


Back to top of Document