A Hemorrhage of Off-Label Use

In this issue, the analysis by Logan and colleagues and systematic review by Yank and coworkers examine off-label use of rFVIIa in hospitalized patients. The editorialists discuss the articles' fin...

can run the gamut from adequately data-driven to truly implausible and potentially harmful. The latter case is illustrated by gabapentin (Neurontin, Pfizer, New York, New York), whose manufacturer agreed in 2004 to pay the government $430 million to settle charges of improper off-label marketing. Its promotional campaigns had been so successful that by 2004, an estimated 90% of Neurontin sales were for off-label uses (6), including many indications with little convincing evidence of efficacy. A recent review of off-label prescribing among office-based physicians found that a sobering 73% of off-label prescribing had little or no scientific support (7).
This brings us to the case of recombinant factor VIIa (rFVIIa) (NovoSeven, Novo Nordisk, Bagsvaerd, Denmark), the recombinant procoagulant originally approved in 1999 solely for the management of patients with hemophilia, especially those who had developed inhibitors to factor VIII. However, not many persons have hemophilia and even fewer have inhibitors to factor VIII; in fact, there is so little hemophilia in the marketplace that rFVIIa was approved as an orphan drug under a legislative program designed to incentivize drug development for patients with rare diseases. That law provides manufacturers with numerous financial benefits, including tax breaks for research and 7 years of guaranteed market exclusivity after approval.
However, in this issue, Logan and colleagues (8) show that use of rFVIIa in hospitalized patients without hemophilia grew more than 140-fold from 2000 to 2008 (8). By the end of that period, its approved indication for hemophilia comprised only 3% of its in-hospital use, with 97% of its use for off-label indications, including cardiovascular surgery, trauma, intracerebral hemorrhage, and other purposes. One explanation may derive from the understandable desire of surgeons and neurologists to protect their patients from excessive bleeding, and such use has the Galenic justification of appearing logical on its face: "The patient is bleeding! Administer a procoagulant!" It is not yet clear whether improper promotion of the product contributed to this rapid expansion of use. The manufacturer has denied such practices (9), although it is under investigation by the U.S. Department of Defense (10), which was reported to be looking into "financial arrangements between the [army] and Novo Nordisk" related to use of NovoSeven in overseas combat operations (11). There is reason to wonder how the use of an obscure recombinant coagulation factor marketed exclusively to hematologists came to be used so widely by cardiac surgeons, neurologists, and trauma specialists. Further investigation may cast additional light on this question (12).
Is such off-label use nonetheless warranted by solid trial evidence? Yank and coworkers (13) address this topic in this issue. In this study, investigators systematically reviewed the literature on the efficacy and safety of rFVIIa

Annals of Internal Medicine
Editorial used for a variety of unapproved indications. They identified all available reports that addressed this issue and found 64 worthy of review. Only 16 were randomized, controlled trials; the others were observational studies (n ϭ 26) that compared the treatment with another approach or had no comparator group (n ϭ 22). Overall, Yank and coworkers found no evidence that rFVIIa reduced mortality for any off-label use; however, it did increase the risk for thromboembolism. Their findings are compatible with other recent studies (14,15).
So here we have rapidly increasing use of a treatment that does not benefit patients and increases the risk for dangerous thrombotic events-and which the investigators estimate to cost $10 000 per dose. Allowing physician autonomy to choose medications is appealing, but not when it results in unhelpful, dangerous, and costly decisions.
With such compelling data in place about the runaway use, uselessness, and risk for this expensive treatment, what can be done to reduce it? First, if evidence should emerge that the manufacturer played a role in building a market for the unauthorized and increasingly implausible prescribing of its product, both civil and criminal responses will probably be brought to bear, as has occurred for many other instances of corporate-sponsored drug misuse (16). Second, rFVIIa is used in hospitals, which should be providing organizational oversight to protect patients, as well as the institutions' own pharmacy budgets. In hospitals where such use continues, existing quality assurance, patient safety, and risk-management groups will surely want to look hard at these practices. Although off-label prescribing by physicians is not illegal, physicians who persist in such use in the face of clear evidence of inutility and harm could be subject to civil action by the affected patients or their heirs.
There is some good news. Both of these studies were made possible by funding from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, which is devoting increasing resources to support such comprehensive assessments of both utilization and of efficacy and safety-the sine qua non of a data-driven health care enterprise (17). The study by Logan and colleagues (8) represents rigorous use of emerging data sets of medication use, and the study by Yank and coworkers (13) is a good example of a solid systematic review, a once-arcane approach that is assuming greater maturity and utility as we begin to think more clearly about the inputs and outcomes of our often out-of-control health care system. These studies provide rigorous, unbiased assessments of both utilization patterns and clinical evidence that can serve as a model for the many other issues of rational therapy decisions that physicians, patients, and policymakers face.