
September 2004 Cover
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Abbott Laboratories' marketing its AIDS drug Norvir in certain patient information
materials as the lowest-cost protease inhibitor is false and misleading, the Food and Drug
Administration warned the company last month in a letter. The FDA action escalates the
controversy surrounding Abbott's December decision to increase Norvir's price by 400
percent. That hike prompted attorneys general in New York and Illinois to launch
investigations and AIDS activists to file lawsuits against Abbott.
In the letter, FDA cited a cost chart Abbott uses to market Norvir that claims the
100-milligram dose costs less per day than similar drugs. But FDA noted Norvir is only
effective at doses three to six times greater than that. "Your cost chart raises
significant public health
and safety concerns because of the violations outlined... and the potential adverse impact
these false and misleading messages may have on the HIV community by promoting a
subtherapeutic dose and regimen of Norvir," said FDA.
Two patient brochures, a cost-comparison chart, a wall chart and statements on a
promotional Web site included the misleading material. FDA said the drug maker also omitted
some drugs from a list of medications that should not be taken with Norvir, and it failed
to
state that Norvir is not a cure for HIV, does not reduce the risk of transmitting HIV, and
has unknown long-term risks.
Editor's Note: from the Chicago Tribune
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