Talk:Finasteride: Difference between revisions
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:::I'm really not sure to what your comment pertains. The edits have used sources that high quality according to the Wiki community. This problem has been visible for a long time now and as a consequence several of the links have died after a period of years. They have been updated accordingly. I am not sure if your suggestion that I am nothing if not persistent is some failed attempt at humor given the discussion on persistent side effects of the drug, but in any case it is in very poor taste. The Wikipedia community should expect and require more from members it makes administrators. [[User:Doors22|Doors22]] ([[User talk:Doors22|talk]]) 06:46, 21 October 2014 (UTC) |
:::I'm really not sure to what your comment pertains. The edits have used sources that high quality according to the Wiki community. This problem has been visible for a long time now and as a consequence several of the links have died after a period of years. They have been updated accordingly. I am not sure if your suggestion that I am nothing if not persistent is some failed attempt at humor given the discussion on persistent side effects of the drug, but in any case it is in very poor taste. The Wikipedia community should expect and require more from members it makes administrators. [[User:Doors22|Doors22]] ([[User talk:Doors22|talk]]) 06:46, 21 October 2014 (UTC) |
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::{{u|Doors22}} No, my comment about "persistence" relates to the fact that you've been editing Wikipedia as a [[WP:SPA|single-purpose account]] since February 2011. During that time we have had repeated discussions about using Wikipedia to promote awareness of a phenomenon that has been very poorly studied. Without wanting to be particularly patronising, I think your time might be better spent by collaborating with academic andrologists on improving the pathophysiological understanding and documenting the phenomenon using validated objective measures. [[User:Jfdwolff|JFW]] | [[User_talk:Jfdwolff|<small>T@lk</small>]] 13:20, 21 October 2014 (UTC) |
Revision as of 13:20, 21 October 2014
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Jenny McCarthy
On the Howard Stern show Jenny McCarthy claimed that propecia has the side effcts of erectile disfunction. http://howardstern.com/ (go to wensday's show, March 13, 2013) I think its an interesting bit of information for the article, adding a cultural dimension. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 97.107.215.232 (talk) 08:01, 15 March 2013 (UTC)
- It is already discussed in extenso. Jenny McCarthy is not a medical authority. JFW | T@lk 21:52, 17 March 2013 (UTC)
Edit request
Merck warned about persistent Finasteride side effects in the early 1990's on the Proscar label. This means they showed up in the clinical trials. The article as it currently is indicates that only Internet hysteria caused a wave of post-marketing case reports, mandating a label change. When in fact, side effects that persist after discontinuation was first on the label nearly two decades ago. The warning was only omitted on one Finasteride brand (Propecia). The Australian Financial Review mentioned this in a piece on finasteride. Australian Financial Review — Preceding unsigned comment added by Gilmour1201 (talk • contribs)
- As I explained on your talk page, this cannot be discussed without a WP:MEDRS-compatible secondary source. JFW | T@lk 11:53, 20 February 2014 (UTC)
Both labels have been cited. The reader can verify the incongruity. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Gilmour1201 (talk • contribs) 08:28, 21 February 2014 (UTC)
JfdWolff, you can even read the label in your native tongue. See the Dutch label warning of persistent side effects here.
ETA: Copy and Paste if the linke won't work from Wikipedia.
- "Als de verschijnselen bleven aanhouden, verdwenen ze meestal bij het stopzetten van de inname van PROSCAR."
- Gilmour1201 The situation hasn't changed. You are engaging in investigative journalism rather than writing an encyclopedia. There is already a section that discusses very clearly the nature of sexual AEs and the fact that they might persist. You are now adding some weak sources (that definitely fail WP:MEDRS) to suggest that the package inserts didn't always discuss this side effect. The only benefit that I can see is an implied accusation of bad faith on behalf of the manufacturer. For such a claim you need very strong sources, quite the opposite of what you're doing. :::I really think you should have a look at dispute resolution rather than repeatedly adding the same stuff. Alternatively, you could try the reliable sources noticeboard to see whether the community has particular views on the quality of your sources. Good luck. JFW | T@lk 12:31, 21 February 2014 (UTC)
JDWolff , your latest post is so absurd I don't even know where to begin. You say, "there is already a section that discusses very clearly the nature of sexual AE's and the fact that they might persist." I already told you why an addendum is necessary. The article as is indicates that ONLY POST-MARKETING CASE REPORTS of persistent sexual AE's have been reported. But not only was persistent side effects warned about when Proscar hit the market, but persistent AE's were also picked up in the PLESS trials.
- "You are now adding some weak sources (that definitely fail WP:MEDRS) to suggest that the package inserts didn't always discuss this side effect."
I don't even know what you mean here. When discussing the package insert, how can you call citing the package insert itself a "weak source?" Please answer
- "To suggest that package inserts didn't always discuss this side effect?" lol, WHAT? I said one of them discussed "this" side effect (side effects that persist after discontination) and the other omitted it
- Proscar label: If side effects persist, they USUALLY resolve upon discontinuing 'Proscar'
- Propecia label: These side effects went away in men who stopped taking PROPECIA
Clearly, one label indicates side effects can persist after discontinuing the drug, the other label indicates it cannot. This is information Wikipedia readers need to know about. Doctors look at these labels for information on how to treat patients.
ETA: These aren't the updated labels based on case reports. These were the original labels in the 1990's, as you would be easily able to verify in the sources I gave.
- "Can you please tell me the where exactly it states the Propecia trials were double-blind?" - Go to site http://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/nda/97/020788_propecia_toc.cfm. Open part one of the medical review, go to page 28. Then open part 2 and and go to pages 42 and 92. These are the page numbers of the original document, and not PDF numbering.
- The last page of Part 3 of the medical review discusses findings that unlike the 5 mg dose, the 1 mg dose "had little effect on semen production". and that there "appears to be a dose-dependent effect on ejaculate volume". So I believe the normal observation of a dose response relationship holds here.
- I'm a little surprised by your comment that patients began experiencing sexual side effects for the first time after stopping the drug. Do you have a reference? What would be the proposed mechanism for this?
- Its hard for me to evaluate stuff on chat boards that comes from outside of a double blind RCT. For a 60 year old to report falling sex drive and ability to perform is not unusual in any way. Especially when followed over a 6 year period. In some studies the prevalence of impotence in this age group is above 40%.
Many thanks Formerly 98 (talk) 09:02, 23 February 2014 (UTC)
Adverse Events
I don't think it makes much sense to include information in the article about theoretical concerns about long term effects that were raised 17 years ago (BEFORE any long term safety data existed) and then exclude actual data about long term safety from two large, multi-year trials that were designed precisely to address long term safety questions. Whatever your feelings about adding data "from a single trial" (actually it was 2 and they were big stuides), data always outweighs theoretical concerns that were voiced before data was available.
I'd suggest deleting the theoretical concerns (as I did in the first place) and keeping the discussion focused on actual safety data. The actual data consists mainly of
- The results of the 5 year safety trials conducted post-approval. These are rigorous but not powered to detect rare side effects
- The case reports that formed the basis of regulatory warnings of long term sexual effects. These are less rigorous, but strongly suggestive of long term effects in a small minority of patients.
The latter of these is already incorporated in the article. The former should be too though its not a deal breaking issue from my point of view. What makes no sense is to raise the theoretical concerns from 1997 and then deliberately leave out the data from the trials that were designed to address those concerns.
I'm also modifying the language describing the AdCom meeting for now. In contrast to the current language stating that the panel "refused to approve" Propecia, both the official transcript of the meeting and a Chicago Sun article indicate that no vote was taken. Formerly 98 (talk) 14:38, 22 February 2014 (UTC)
- Formerly 98 Why leave out the data from safety trials that show side effects can be persistent? As I stated before, this article as is indicates that the only evidence of persistent side effects is post-marketing case reports, when that isn't the case. Doctors can read this article and come to the conclusion that Finasteride cannot cause persisent side effects based on the omitted evidence. They may be unaware that Merck warned about a causal relationship between Proscar and persistent side effects when Proscar first hit the market*. The (pre-Wikipedia) paradigm only shifted when Propecia hit the market and the warning was "these side effects went away in men who stopped taking PROPECIA." Wikipedia shouldn't help to propagate this myth, when the data are right here. I agree with you 100%, let's not deliberately leave out any datum.
- Copy and paste for original label: mcs.open.ac.uk/nlg/old_projects/pills/corpus/pil/doc/proscar.doc
I don't fully agree with you since I feel there is a contradiction in your response. You mention the 5 year safety trials were deliberately designed to address those concerns but also mention that while these are rigorous they are not designed to detect rare side effects. On the contrary, this was an industry funded study and would have only been publicly released if it revealed data that was favorably to the manufacturer. This publishing phenomena has been well documented but really is part of another discussion.
I do agree that we should restructure the section on adverse side effects. As a compromise, I suggest we move mention of the advisory panel's discussion to the history section which talks about the drug discovery and approval process in more depth. The transcript of the advisory meeting does not include the outcome of the vote or the committee's recommendation but that is not the equivalent of saying it indicates no vote was taken. I do think it is worth including in the history section since as you probably know the FDA most often accepts the AdCom's suggestion especially when they do not suggest approval. I'll moderate the language about the committee's recommendation. So far, the news article I have provided is the only source to directly reference the committee's recommendation (or lack thereof). It would be appreciated if you would provide the Chicago Sun article for purposes of comparison since I was unable to locate this on my own. Thanks and I'm happy to discuss further if you feel these edits merit additional change. Doors22 (talk) 19:53, 22 February 2014 (UTC)
- Hi Doors:
- Thanks for your thoughtful response. I am aware that some of these issues have been discussed at great length, and I am not really the person to talk to about reversing decisions made previously. Frankly, I'm not that influential.
- The language difference you note is intriguing, but I don't think it rises to the level of evidence required by WP:MEDRS. I do not know the detailed history of the package inserts, but I wonder if any of the following are relevant to your observation.
- Propecia is a 1 mg tablet and Proscar is 5 mg.
- The clinical trials were performed in different populations.
- I looked into this by digging into the FDA approval summary for Propecia http://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/nda/97/20788_PROPECIA%20TABLETS,%201MG_MEDR_P3.PDF My reasoning is as follows:
- The publications may not be reliable sources of AE information, but the FDA approval summaries probably are
- The FDA requires submission of raw data from individual patients. One cannot simply omit data, it would be necessary to actively submit fraudulent data
- This would put the individual responsible at high risk of jail time
- There is reasonable evidence that these submissions are accurate. Most of the expose papers that revealed selective publication by pharma companies came from comparing published results to data obtained in Freedom of Information requests to FDA
- The Approval Summary for Propecia explicitly states: "Eleven patients (1.2%) on finasteride and 8 patients (0.9%) on placebo discontinued due to a drug related sexual adverse event. All of them had resolution of their sexual adverse events"
- The publications may not be reliable sources of AE information, but the FDA approval summaries probably are
- You are correct in that there is an intrinsic contradiction between doing a long term safety study and then stating that it was not powered to see an effect. But some side effects are just too rare to readily pick up in trials. The approval summary notes that only 1.2% patients discontinued due to sexual side effects. Assuming that 10% of those stopping due to sexual side effects find that they continue after stopping, that's only 0.1%. You'd need to do a trial in 10,000 patients (5,000 treatment, 5,000 placebo) to reliably see even one or two examples pre-approval. Based on the 700 spontaneous reports described by the FDA in their announcement, the usual assumption that only one in 10 to 20 unexpected adverse events is reported, and peak Finasteride sales of $1.2 billion, I think a rate of about 1 in a few thousand is probably a reasonable estimate of the actual rate. So there is no contradiction between saying that this was not seen in clinical trials but that it is probably a real effect of the drug.
- As for a compromise:
- I've read a lot of these transcripts, and I disagree with your comment that a vote would not be shown. The transcript begins with the committee members introducing themselves and ends with adjournment of the meeting. The Chicago Tribune article specifically states that "The committee did not vote on Propeicia's safety or effectiveness".
- Generally I'd like to stick with the data and not with concerns voiced before data was available. Lets just state what the data shows.
- We know that the incidence of permanent sexual dysfunction is low (from the clinical trials), but it probably does occur (from the spontaneous reports and the FDA warning).
- Can we just state the above in the Sexual Side Effects section?
- Also, I really don't want to go on record as recommending a rehash of anything that has been extensively discussed already. Please take any prior discussions of this issue into account.
Best Regards Formerly 98 (talk) 21:10, 22 February 2014 (UTC)
- OK, after reading the Chicago Sun article it does change my understanding of the meeting. There is already mention of the persistent sexual side effects listed elsewhere in the article. The new interpretation of the AdCom meeting doesn't really make sense to include at the top of the side effects section so I think it makes sense to remove that whole paragraph entirely. Please let me know if you disagree.Doors22 (talk) 21:54, 22 February 2014 (UTC)
- No objection here. Thanks for a good exchange of ideas. Formerly 98 (talk) 22:20, 22 February 2014 (UTC)
- Formerly 98 You seem to be cherry-picking data. For the Propecia trials, you cite the following:
- "Eleven patients (1.2%) on finasteride and 8 patients (0.9%) on placebo discontinued due to a drug related sexual adverse event. All of them had resolution of their sexual adverse events"
- Formerly 98 You seem to be cherry-picking data. For the Propecia trials, you cite the following:
- You call the 3040 Randomized Control Trial as rigorous, but fail to cite the results of persistent sexual Adverse Events
- "Only 4% of finasteride and 2% of placebo patients discontinued the study because of sexual AEs. In men who discontinued with a sexual AE, 50% and 41% experienced resolution of their sexual AE after discontinuing finasteride or placebo therapy, respectively."
- You call the 3040 Randomized Control Trial as rigorous, but fail to cite the results of persistent sexual Adverse Events
- Please note that the PLESS study was a double-blind, while the Propecia trial was not. The PLESS is more robust and more up-to-date than the Clinton era Propecia trial data. As you stated, let's stick with the data, giving favor to the most robust. The PLESS results of persistent sexual side effects deserves a place in the Sexual Side Effects section. They also corroborate post-marketing data. Once again, as the page currently is, the reader is led to believe that only the only evidence of persistent sexual side effects is case reports, and that isn't the case.
Also, it was me, not Doors, who was concerned about the incongruity of the two warning labels for the same drug. I'd like to discuss your points, but I think we should come to an agreement on the PLESS data first.
And your assumptions for your long-term Propecia side effects estimation are wrong, but more on that later.
- Hi whoever wrote that. (You didn't sign your comment).
- I found the reference for the PLESS Proscar results:"Only 4% of finasteride and 2% of placebo patients discontinued the study because of sexual AEs. In men who discontinued with a sexual AE, 50% and 41% experienced resolution of their sexual AE after discontinuing finasteride or placebo therapy, respectively." I'm not deliberately cherry picking, but this study did not come up in a Pubmed search for phase 3 studies of finasteride. The difference is as you have reported it, and appears statistically significant. But the FDA reported in 2012 that "In controlled clinical trials, these side effects resolved in patients who stopped finasteride, as well as in most patients who continued therapy." I'd like to understand this a bit better, which will likely mean going to the library to see what was seen in the other trials.
- I've provided the reference to my quote from the Propecia development program "Eleven patients (1.2%) on finasteride and 8 patients (0.9%) on placebo discontinued due to a drug related sexual adverse event. All of them had resolution of their sexual adverse events" above. Its on page 76 of the document I linked to above.
- I disagree with your assessment that the PLESS trial is of higher quality than the Propecia trials. The FDA approval summary describes all of the Propecia trials as double blind, in contrast with your statement. The Propecia trials were performed in 1993-4, and the PLESS trial initiated around 1995-6 or so. The designs of the trials, which were set before the trials started and not when they ended, would presumably be of similar sophistication. Any difference in the results of the two trials is best attributed to the fact that they looked at drmatically different doses of finasteride.
- What specifically about my assumptions do you think is are incorrect? The standard pharmacoepidemiology assumption is that 5-10% of unexpected adverse events of new drugs are reported. That would mean the 700 cases reported to the FDA corresponds to about 15,000 cases over 12 years, or a little over 1000 per year. Given that this was a billion dollar drug that sold for about $1000 for a year's therapy, one can calculate an incidence of about one per thousand patient years. This is a pretty good fit to the numbers I derived from the discontinuation rates in the FDA doc.
Thanks Formerly 98 (talk) 03:42, 23 February 2014 (UTC)
Hi Formerly 98. Can you please tell me the where exactly it states the Propecia trials were double-blind? Thanks.
I beg to differ that the different results were from "Dramatically different doses of Finasteride." Finasteride has a flat-dose response rate. 1mg of Finasteride inhibits nearly the same amount of DHT as 5mg. There was a study linked on this on the University of Pennsylvania website, but it was taken down late 2012. Suspicious. The dead link is here: http://www.physics.upenn.edu/facultyinfo/frankel/papers/propeciafda2/index.html
It's not that you're wrong regarding your estimation of what % of men experience persistent side effects, it's just that you weren't given the proper tools. The only information you are given on those who didn't experience persistent side effects are the patients who discontinued therapy. For those who finished the trial, there is a cutoff date when you are allowed to report an Adverse Event. So we have no measurement of the 900 other men who finished the trial. Going by case reports, the side effects start after quitting the drug. When disclosing to shareholders why they're being sued, Merck explained that patients experienced a range of sexual side effects upon cessation of Propecia.
As for going by case reports, we have no idea how many reports the FDA has received. They said they reviewed close to 700 reports, but it doesn't say how many they've received. Admittedly, the FDA doesn't review every report. Many of them are thrown out for a variety of reasons. So it's unreasonable to base an estimate on the case reports.
In the abstract of the paper I cited, it doesn't say how many men were in the Finasteride group. But if there were 1,500, 4% or 60 of them quit Finasteride due to a sexual AE. 50%, or 30, did not experience resolution of their sexual AE's. So that's 30 out of 1,500. And that's only measuring those who quit the trial. My estimation has it at 2%, yours at .01%. Either way, it's a moving target.
Also, I don't think the persistent sexual side effects in the PLESS trials was statistically significant. But I don't know if an ANOVA was done or they left it as is.
As for the FDA stating "In controlled clinical trials, these side effects resolved in patients who stopped finasteride, as well as in most patients who continued therapy," that's nothing but meaningless PR chatter. They don't like to admit that their studies fail to predict what is seen in the real-world. The evidence cited in this thread shows they're wrong. Like I've shown many times, the original Finasteride consumer label warned of persistent side effects. So the FDA was communicating nothing, just doing some face-saving PR vernacular. It's silly to think the FDA would admit the trials didn't properly screen for the withdrawal effect, admit patients weren't properly followed-up on after the trial was over, or cite a study that showed the label they approved was wrong the entire time. There's even more in the medical literature that say Finasteride side effects don't always resolve, but I'd like to finish with the PLESS and original Proscar label discussion before moving on.
Which label more accurately describes what's being seen in the real world?
Proscar label: If side effects persist, they USUALLY resolve upon discontinuing 'Proscar'
Propecia label: These side effects went away in men who stopped taking PROPECIA
Thanks for researching this important public health matter.
ETA: Formerly 98, if you're interested, there are people in forums. who claim they were involved in Finasteride clinical trials and experienced severe sexual problems after the trial concluded. Obviously, this would never make it to a Wikipedia page, but for academic reasons, if you're interested in hearing trial patients in their own words, here's one such patient:
- "I signed up for the Prostate Cancer Prevention Trial at about the age of 50. Took Proscar 1mg daily for six years, followed by a prostate biopsy. When the test was unveiled, I was informed that I had been taking finasteride and not a placebo. Around the time the trial concluded, I began to notice ED problems, primarily loss of sensitivity. It became harder and harder to achieve an orgasm and ejaculate. After five years had elapsed, I was no longer able to achieve an intravaginal orgasm and had to masturbate. I was 60 years old by then. Since then, it has been a steadily downward slope. I no longer have morning erections and haven't been able to ejaculate for about a year."
- "Can you please tell me the where exactly it states the Propecia trials were double-blind?" - Go to site http://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/nda/97/020788_propecia_toc.cfm. Open part one of the medical review, go to page 28. Then open part 2 and and go to pages 42 and 92. These are the page numbers of the original document, and not PDF numbering.
- The last page of Part 3 of the medical review discusses findings that unlike the 5 mg dose, the 1 mg dose "had little effect on semen production". and that there "appears to be a dose-dependent effect on ejaculate volume". So I believe the normal observation of a dose response relationship holds here.
- I'm a little surprised by your comment that patients began experiencing sexual side effects for the first time after stopping the drug. Do you have a reference? What would be the proposed mechanism for this?
- Its hard for me to evaluate stuff on chat boards that comes from outside of a double blind RCT. For a 60 year old to report falling sex drive and ability to perform is not unusual in any way. Especially when followed over a 6 year period. In some studies the prevalence of impotence in this age group is above 40%.
- I noticed that one case of sexual dysfunction that did not resolve upon ceasing treatment was observed in phase 2 according to these docs.
- The Canadian Adverse Event database http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/dhp-mps/medeff/databasdon/index-eng.php which is more accessible than the US one seems to show about 145 "not recovered/not resolved" reports of sexual dysfunction associated with finasteride over the same time period as the FDA review. Correcting by the size of the two national populations, I get an estimated number of AE reports for the US of about 1330, which is about twice the number mentioned in the FDA press release.
- Many thanks Formerly 98 (talk) 09:08, 23 February 2014 (UTC)
Formerly 98 The higher reduction of ejaculate volume for 5mg dose patients has nothing to do with why a warning of persistent side effects would be on the Proscar label, but omitted on the Propecia label. The reduction of DHT for 1mg--what we're most interested in--is exactly one page above the page you cited. It's nearly identical to what 5mg reduces ~65% of serum DHT. As it stands, 1 mg and 5mg of Finasteride has nearly the same effect on the male endocrine system.
The Orignal Proscar label should be discussed in the Finasteride Wikipedia page. It is what most accurately describes what's seen in the real world. No one has given a reasonable explanation why the Original Proscar label warning of persistent sexual side effects shouldn't be on the Finasteride Wikipedia page.
I understand Internet forums don't serve as a basis for an encyclepedia. I provided that report for you because a patient IN A CLINICAL TRIAL experienced a range of sexual side effects UPON CESSATION of Finasteride. I can direct you to literally thousands of other patient reports--ranging from ages 17 to 70--with similiar post-drug reactions.
My point was that the withdrawal effect was never properly screened for, and the paradigm that "side effects always go away" was based on the reports 11 PATIENTS who did not complete the Propecia study. For a description of the post-drug reaction, please see http://propeciahelp(DOT)com/symptoms If you're the type to demand only published literature, see the first Dr. Irwig study on Finasteride. He says something like 67% of patients he interviewed reported worsening of side effects upon cessation.
As for a mechanisms to explain why side effects get worse after quitting: that's is currently being studied at Brigham and Women's Hospital and Baylor College of Medicine. It's been demonstrated in animals that Androgen Ablation leads to permanent Androgen Receptor hypersensitivity, making symptoms worse after a return of baseline DHT. From my understanding, this is the leading hypothesis.
In any event, it's well-established that Finasteride does cause permanent sexual side effects. As shown in case reports, clinical trials, and other studies in the medical literature. That's why it's imperative Wikipedia put the PLESS trial results showing persistent Finsateride sexual side effects. No one has even offered a rebuttal for why it shouldn't be, and quite frankly, it's looking awefully suspicious. Many influential people are looking into and reporting these machinations by Wikipedia. (ETA) These suspicions grow by the minute when Wikipedia puts a "protection filter" on PropeciaHelp. It's as if Wikipedia encourages ignoring real-world patients. Sad.
And thanks for citing the page # where it says it's a double-blind placeo study. However, the studies were both single-blind and double-blind.
- "The higher reduction of ejaculate volume for 5mg dose patients has nothing to do with why a warning of persistent side effects would be on the Proscar label, but omitted on the Propecia label. The reduction of DHT for 1mg--what we're most interested in--is exactly one page above the page you cited." - I'm not at all sure I agree with that. What is the source of your number for the DHT reduction caused by the 5 mg dose? We both need to be careful about drawing broad conclusions based on cross-trial comparisons.
- "No one has given a reasonable explanation why the Original Proscar label warning of persistent sexual side effects shouldn't be on the Finasteride Wikipedia page." - We're discussing that now, though I'll be upfront and say I agree with a previous comment that Wikipedia is not an investigative journalism venue. I've never run across a case where the frequency of side effects is not dose-dependent upon a 5x change, and a priori am deeply skeptical that there is any need to invoke any other explanation for the difference in the labels.
- "It's been demonstrated in animals that Androgen Ablation leads to permanent Androgen Receptor hypersensitivity, making symptoms worse after a return of baseline DHT." - I'd be interested in reading about this if you have a ref. Wouldn't androgen hypersensitivity have exactly the opposite effect?
- "In any event, it's well-established that Finasteride does cause permanent sexual side effects...I can direct you to literally thousands of other patient reports" - Based on what I've seen so far I'm inclined to agree that the higher dose probably does have this effect in a very small fraction of men (which given the very large number of men who have taken the drug would in fact correspond to "many thousands of case reports". I'd like to understand the FDA's comments better and see what was observed in other Propecia trials, which will require a trip to the library.
- I suppose we should talk about what the goals of this discussion are. I know that there has been a lot of discussion of this topic before, and I am certainly not influential enough to reverse decisions that were made previously after extensive discussion. What reason has been given previously for not including the observations from the PLES trial? Formerly 98 (talk) 12:03, 24 February 2014 (UTC)Thanks
Suggested edits for clarity
One fairly important and one minor suggestion for better clarity in the article. I am not addressing the content, which I'm not at all qualified to do.
The intro says: "Finasteride (brand names Proscar and Propecia by Merck, among other generic names)..." This is unclear, to a layman at least. "Brand names" are not "among" other generic names -- they are a separate category. If there are other generic names for this drug, I don't see them listed; there is one note, however, of a related 5α-reductase inhibitor. So is it that there are other brand names for this drug? Or other generic names?
More important, I think, is the arrangement of the section on prostate cancer. The opening sentence gives the important point, I agree, but because you have to go to the footnote to find out when the FDA required a label change, it's not clear whether this whole section is written in chronological or reverse-chronological style. The result, after reading through the entire section, is deep confusion. The two paragraphs seem to contradict one another sharply; while there is some justification for the FDA's decision given in the first paragraph, there is a great deal more justification given in the second paragraph for the 2005 study's conclusion that the drug does not cause high-grade cancers. It takes a careful reading to see that the FDA's decision is based on a fear that the drug may mask the emergence of new cancers and (apparently) that doesn't conflict with the 2005 study's conclusion that it doesn't cause new cancers. (It does appear to contradict the earlier study's conclusion that the smaller prostate size makes new cancers easier to detect.)
This section could very usefully be recast, I think.Tito john (talk) 05:01, 24 February 2014 (UTC)
Edits of September 28
(Moving this discussion from User Talk pages to this page.)
Several changes made on September 11 were reverted with the explanation "Please don't remove sections that have been discussed and agreed upon months/years earlier - Discuss further on talk page if you wish)". First I'd say that I don't see anything on the Talk page clearly indicating that the language you have reverted back to is "consensus". The discussion ended on February 24, with me asking you a series of questions that you never responded to.
- "In December 2008, the Swedish Medical Products agency concluded a safety investigation of finasteride and advised that finasteride may cause irreversible sexual dysfunction. The Agency's updated safety information lists difficulty in obtaining an erection that persists indefinitely, even after the discontinuation of finasteride, as a possible side effect of the drug"
- As my edit summary explains, the quoted insert only says that there have been case reports and causation is unestablished. It is WP:UNDUE to call this a "warning". I've literally come across AERS reports in which people have reported "death of pet" as a side effect of medication. If we included every spontaneous adverse event report as a "warning" for other drugs we'd need several hundred thousand KB just to list them out. This is not meaningful evidence in support of a causative relationship. Furthermore, the link does not work, making this claim unverifiable and subject to immediate removal under WP:VERIFY
- I am not the person with whom you were conversing on February 24th. I am not sure if you were aware of that or not but either way this discussion does not involve the PLESS trial. I have updated the reference with a live, verifiable link. These AERS cannot be compared to reports indicating "death of pet". The relevant regulatory bodies discovered a sufficient number of reports and decided it warranted including a statement on their respective labels. Your reference to "death of pet" is potentially misleading too as a pet could have accidentally consumed the medication, leading to death, which makes the report completely valid not so humorous. Doors22 (talk) 06:39, 21 October 2014 (UTC)
- "The UK's Medical and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) cites reports of erectile dysfunction that persists once use of finasteride has stoppedIn April 2011 Merck revised the United States' warning in consumer and medical leaflets to include erectile dysfunction that may persist after stopping finasteride."
- As noted in my edit summary, the cited document from MHRA appears to say nothing about sexual dysfunction. Being unverifiable, it is subject to immediate deletion per WP:VERIFY. You've restored this material without addressing my explanation for the edit, and in contrast to your comment, there is no consensus on the Talk page for including this material. Even if there were, it would violate WP:CONEXCEPT as the material is unverifiable.
- In April 2012, the warning label was further strengthened to include reports of persistent libido disorders, ejaculation disorders, orgasm disorders, and decreased libido. According to FDA, these warnings were added as precaution after reviewing 678 case reports of post-treatment sexual dysfunction received over an 18 year period. The Agency further stated that "despite the fact that clear causal links between finasteride (Propecia and Proscar) and sexual adverse events have NOT been established, the cases suggest a broader range of adverse effects than previously reported in patients taking these drugs."
- This is probably an acceptable source as the FDA issued a release around the label changes.
- I've deleted the Swedish Medical Agency and MHRA references and left the FDA one in place.
- "regulatory authorities have listed mood disorders as among the possible adverse effects of finasteride,"
- As I noted in my edit summary, the cited reference does not support the statement "regulatory authorities have listed mood disorders as among the possible adverse effects of finasteride". You reverted my deletion of this material without commenting on the reason for the deletion. "Prior Consensus", which I see no evidence for on the Talk page, is insufficient to overcome the fundamental pillar of Wikipedia that all content must be sourced.
- I've deleted the reference to "regulatory authorities" as unverifiable.
- "Some studies have shown that the dose of finasteride needed to treat male pattern baldness may be smaller than 1 mg.[44] Petitions to the FDA to re-examine the approved dosage in light of the statistical evidence and possible long-term risks,[45] were met with the response that a study had shown increased effect of a 1 mg dose compared to 0.2 mg without added risks; the same study also concluded that doses of 0.01 mg per day were found to be ineffective in treating hair loss.[45]"
- Once again you've reverted me without responding to the reasons in my edit summary and appealing to a "consensus" for which there is no evidence on the Talk page. As I noted in the edit summary, this petition is non-notable. I could write a petition to the FDA tomorrow requesting that they re-examine the dosage for Lipitor. But I am not a well known expert in the field of cardiology, so its really not notable unless the FDA actually acts on it.
- The statement that doses needed may be less than 1 mg cites an FDA document, in which I can find no discussion of dosing issues. Like any other statement without verifiable sources, it can and should be deleted. Verifiability is one of the 3 pillars of Wikipedia. I've deleted the paragraph. Formerly 98 (talk) 11:10, 28 September 2014 (UTC)
You posted on my talk page that the most recent edits on the talk page were you asking questions to which I didn't not respond. This isn't correct for two reasons. First, your comments were directed at an entirely separate editor and secondly, you were asking questions about the PLESS study which has already been removed from the article. You even mention you aren't influential enough to reverse decisions made after extensive discussion, but several months later this is exactly what you did.
"I suppose we should talk about what the goals of this discussion are. I know that there has been a lot of discussion of this topic before, and I am certainly not influential enough to reverse decisions that were made previously after extensive discussion. What reason has been given previously for not including the observations from the PLES trial? Formerly 98 (talk) 12:03, 24 February 2014 (UTC)Thanks"
The previous consensus was attained much earlier in the history of the talk page or in the direct notes of the edits. Some of your points are valid - I did not notice that some people had given incorrect references or maybe the reference links had broken, since as I mentioned, the edits were made a long time ago. I will take your comments into consideration and try to fix the reference links where possible. Doors22 (talk) 14:54, 28 September 2014 (UTC)
- @Doors22: I don't think a consensus reached a year or so ago is necessarily still consensus, and my general openness to your concerns about AEs was not intended as agreement to use poor sources. But I don't want to have a huge argument over this, I'll be satisfied for the most part if you fix the sourcing. Prefer that we drop the FDA petition from a physicist. Thanks. Formerly 98 (talk) 15:05, 28 September 2014 (UTC)
- I'm getting a sense of deja vu. Didn't we agree that we needed to be very selective about sources in this highly disputed area? Doors22 isn't anything if not persistent. JFW | T@lk 22:41, 6 October 2014 (UTC)
- I'm really not sure to what your comment pertains. The edits have used sources that high quality according to the Wiki community. This problem has been visible for a long time now and as a consequence several of the links have died after a period of years. They have been updated accordingly. I am not sure if your suggestion that I am nothing if not persistent is some failed attempt at humor given the discussion on persistent side effects of the drug, but in any case it is in very poor taste. The Wikipedia community should expect and require more from members it makes administrators. Doors22 (talk) 06:46, 21 October 2014 (UTC)
- Doors22 No, my comment about "persistence" relates to the fact that you've been editing Wikipedia as a single-purpose account since February 2011. During that time we have had repeated discussions about using Wikipedia to promote awareness of a phenomenon that has been very poorly studied. Without wanting to be particularly patronising, I think your time might be better spent by collaborating with academic andrologists on improving the pathophysiological understanding and documenting the phenomenon using validated objective measures. JFW | T@lk 13:20, 21 October 2014 (UTC)