PERSONAL HEALTH  
comments_image -

Media Hyping Viagra for Women for Drug Company Greed

Drugmaker Pfizer is claiming a new use for Viagra, which would conveniently treat the side effects of one of its other drugs.
 
 
LIKE THIS ARTICLE ?
Join our mailing list:

Sign up to stay up to date on the latest Personal Health headlines via email.

 
 
 
 

When headlines from 500 news sources screamed Women Need Viagra Too! on the basis of a new JAMA study this month, it looked like more Viagra huckstering as usual.

The study boasted that 72 percent of its participants -- women with antidepressant-associated sexual dysfunction (AASD) who had previously had normal sexual function and whose depression had lifted -- responded favorably to Viagra. That's an impressive claim until you see that the study size was only 98 -- or that Pfizer, the blue pill's manufacturer, paid for it.

What's more, its two lead authors, H. George Nurnberg, M.D. and Paula L. Hensley, M.D., report being paid consultants to Pfizer (among dozens of other drug companies) and were participants on its speaker bureau in a previous JAMA study about Viagra for men with antidepressant-associated sexual dysfunction.

And, Pfizer may be in trouble as it approaches the 2011-2013 Viagra/Lipitor "patent cliff" -- the sales falloff expected when patents expire. This comes on the heels of the Federal Aviation Administration's recent action banning pilots and air traffic controllers from taking Pfizer's anti-smoking drug Chantix. (Sell the company for parts, says Citigroup analyst John Boris, noting steady prescription decline since 2004.)

Viagra use itself might be down as the economy squeezes consumers, since the prescriptions are often paid out of pocket, suggests CNBC pharmaceutical reporter Mike Huckman. Men may be cutting Viagra from their budgets -- or cutting pills in half.

But the JAMA article might have less to do with opening new Viagra markets than with keeping the nation's 150 million antidepressant users -- 16 percent of all women between the ages of 20 and 44, according to one estimate -- from going off their meds because of sexual dysfunction side effects.

Especially since Pfizer also makes the antidepressant Zoloft.

About half of all people taking selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) like Zoloft experience sexual dysfunction such as loss of libido or anorgasmia, and as many as 90 percent go off their meds because of it, say researchers. That's a lot of lost patients.

Viagra, or sildenafil citrate, works by inhibiting "cGMP catabolism" in the smooth muscle tissue of the clitoris and penis, which enhances the "cGMP activity" that enables tissue to respond to sexual stimulation -- possibly even when serotonin-altered, as is the case with women on antidepressants.

Still, the study of women's sexual functioning even without the complication of other drugs is a science in its infancy: Not until June of 2005 did the first MRI of the clitoris show that it has 17 parts, with nerve endings extending deep inside a woman's body.

Research suggests that male and female sexual functioning differ considerably, and past Viagra studies have failed to show convincing evidence of the drug's ability to increase sexual response in women.

While one study in the British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology in 2001 showed potential, subsequent studies of sildenafil citrate in women didn't -- a Journal of Women's Health & Gender-Based Medicine study in 2004 concluded, "Any genital physiological effect of sildenafil was not perceived as improving the sexual response" -- and the search for parallel Viagra benefits was largely abandoned.

Until now.

The chance that a Viagra for women could still be viable was so riveting to the mainstream, scientific and investment press that some headlines this month declared that Viagra works in "depressed women" instead of "women on antidepressants" -- a big conceptual difference.

Big pharma's male domination -- and Wall Street's -- has led feminists and sexuality researchers to question the whole pursuit of a female sexuality drug.

If improving women's lives were really the goal, then why would the morning-after pill and other important reproductive drugs continue to languish while pharma forges ahead, trying to rope women into its renewed Viagra propaganda?

submit to reddit

-
Email
Print
Share
LIKED THIS ARTICLE? JOIN OUR EMAIL LIST
Stay up to date with the latest Personal Health headlines via email
Alternet Special Coverage - Occupy Wall Street
Advertisement
Most Read
Most Emailed
Most Discussed
On REDDIT
On DIGG
 
loading most read content ..
Advertisement
Obama Caves to the Right, Will Announce "Compromise" on Contraception Coverage

By Kristen Gwynne | AlterNet

 
 
Go Hungry! Fat Cat New Hampshire Republicans Aim to Ban Lunch Breaks

By Steven D | Booman Tribune

 
 
Employers Have Had to Provide Birth Control Coverage Since 2000

By Joan McCarter | Daily Kos

 
 
Who Cares What The Bishops Think? Old Catholic Guys Do.

By Sara Robinson | Alternet

 
 
Coup in Maldives Threatens Ousted President Mohamed Nasheed, a Leading Voice for Island States Threatened by Global Warming

By Amy Goodman | Democracy Now!

 
 
Finally! Trader Joe's Signs on to Fair Food Agreement for Farm Workers

By Tara Lohan | AlterNet

 
 
The Inside Scoop on the Budding Romance Between Walmart and Monsanto

By Maria Tchijov | Food and Water Watch

 
 
North Carolina Considering Amendment That Would Roll Back the Rights of Both Gay and Straight Couples

By Jonathan Weiler | Independent Weekly

 
 
Ellen Degeneres Strikes Back at Anti-Gay Bigots Who Are Boycotting JC Penney Because She's Their New Spokesperson

By Lauren Kelley | AlterNet

 
 
Unbelievable: Man Beats Wife, Judge Orders Him to Take Her Out to Red Lobster and the Bowling Alley

By Melissa McEwan | Shakesville

 
 
 
Reverend Billy Talen
 
 
 
loading ...
POWERED BY DIGG'S USERS
 
[ page served from web 1 ]