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Direct to consumer advertising for
prescription medicines…How effective it it?
Newswise — Direct-to-consumer advertising
may not be giving big pharma such a big bang
for their buck after all. Despite the
billions spent on bringing drug marketing
campaigns straight into patients’ living
rooms, such strategies have a modest effect
at best—and in some cases, no effect at all.
“People tend to think that if
direct-to-consumer advertising wasn’t
effective, pharma wouldn’t be doing it,”
says Harvard Medical School professor
Stephen Soumerai, principal investigator on
the study.
“But as it turns out, decisions to market
directly to consumers is based on scant
data.”
This study was based at the Department of
Ambulatory Care and Prevention of Harvard
Medical School and Harvard Pilgrim Health
Care and appears September 2 online in the
British Medical Journal.
It is the first-ever controlled study of
direct-to-consumer advertising (DTCA) of
pharmaceuticals.
Currently, the United States and New Zealand
are the only countries that allow drug
companies to advertise directly to patients.
When
the U.S. Food and Drug Administration eased
advertising restrictions on the
pharmaceutical industry in 1997, consumer
advertising jumped 330 percent over the next
10 years.
As of 2005, pharma was spending about $5
billion annually on such campaigns. Some
data implied that such ads increased
prescriptions, but these studies simply
correlated ads with sales, begging the
question, are drugs that sell more simply
advertised more?
But examining the effects of advertising on
sales via a controlled study is problematic.
Given the overwhelming amount of advertising
in the U.S., how do you find two groups that
are very similar, yet one is exposed to
pharmaceutical advertising and the other
isn’t?
The answer: Canada.
DTCA is illegal in Canada. Not surprisingly,
however, national borders are leaky and
American media—television and magazines and
radio, replete with pharma ads—regularly
crosses into Canada.
As a result, Canadians, like Americans, are
swamped with these ads, with one key
exception.
All American advertisements are in English.
Yet Canada has a significant French-speaking
population.
In the Canadian province of Quebec,
approximately 80 percent of its 7.5 million
population speak French as their first
language, and tend to get most of their news
from French-language media.
As a result, residents of Quebec, on the
whole, are far less exposed to DTCA than
other Canadians.
Quebec, then, functioned as a control group
for the study. The researchers compared
prescription rates for advertised drugs in
English-speaking Canadian provinces with
rates in Quebec, where residents were
purportedly less exposed to those same ads.
“It’s not an absolutely perfect control
group,” says Michael Law, first author on
the paper.
“There’s obviously a small percentage of
Quebec residents who are exposed to English
language media. But as control groups go for
this sort of observational study, it’s about
as good as you get.”
Law and Soumerai chose to look at three
specific drugs: Enbrel (rheumatoid
arthritis), Nasonex (nasal allergies), and
Zelnorm (irritable bowel sydrome).
All three drugs were on the market for at
least one year before the DTCA campaign
began, and none were advertised in Canada
through “softer” consumer ads, that is, ads
that may mention the drug by name without
identifying the relevant conditions.
The basic question was simple: did use of
these drugs increase faster in
English-speaking regions after American DTCA
campaigns began?
Using information from IMS Health Canada, a
health information company that receives
data from a panel of about 2,700 Canadian
pharmacies, the researchers analyzed
prescription statistics for each of these
three drugs for a five-year period.
They found that for two of the drugs, Enbrel
and Nasonex, DTCA had no effect whatsoever.
Prescription patterns in English-speaking
Canada and in Quebec remained identical both
before and after DTCA campaigns began.
Sales for Zelnorm, however, did spike
noticeably in English-speaking Canada as
soon as the ad campaign began. While
prescriptions for this drug increased by
over 40 percent, this jump was relatively
short-lived, and after a few years,
prescription rates in both groups resumed
identical patterns.
A similar analysis of U.S. Medicaid
prescriptions found a slightly higher, but
similarly brief, jump in sales.
The researchers hypothesize that DTCA may
not be as effective as other types of
consumer advertising due to the unique
complexity of the marketing/sales
trajectory.
With a typical consumer product, an
individual sees an ad and then can choose to
simply go out and buy the item. “But
pharmaceuticals aren’t typical consumer
products,” says Soumerai.
“A person needs to see an ad, get motivated
by that ad, contact their doctor for an
appointment, show up at the appointment,
communicate both the condition and the drug
to the doctor, convince the doctor that this
drug is preferable to other alternatives,
then actually go out and fill the
prescription. This is a chain of events that
can break at any point.”
This hypothesis may in fact explain the
disparate effects of DTCA on these three
drugs. For Enbrel and Nasonex, there are a
number of over-the-counter and prescription
alternatives that doctors would likely
recommend as first-line treatments.
Zelnorm, however, was the only drug on the
market in both the United States and Canada
for constipation-predominant irritable bowel
syndrome.
The researchers suggest that Zelnorm would
have sold very well without the consumer
advertising.
In March of 2007, Zelnorm was pulled from
the market due to FDA concerns that it may
increase risk for heart attack and stroke.
One hundred years of marketing experience
and recent studies indicate that
face-to-face promotion of drugs to doctors
by pharmaceutical representatives is far
more effective than DTCA.
This research was supported by Harvard
Medical School and Harvard Pilgrim Health
Care, The Social Sciences and Humanities
Research Council of Canada, The Alberta
Heritage Foundation for Medical Research,
and the Agency for Healthcare Research and
Quality.
The funding and data sources for this study
had no role in study design; in the
collection, analysis, and interpretation of
data; or in the writing of the report.
Full citation:
British Medical Journal,
early online publication September 2, 2008
“Effect of illicit direct-to-consumer
advertising on use of etanercept, mometasone,
and tegaserod in Canada: controlled
longitudinal study”
Michael R Law(1), Sumit R Majumdar(2), and
Stephen B Soumerai(1)
1-Department of Ambulatory Care and
Prevention, Harvard Medical School and
Harvard Pilgrim Health Care, Boston, MA
2-Division of General Internal Medicine,
Department of Medicine, 2E3.07 Walter
Mackenzie Health Sciences Centre, University
of Alberta Hospital, Edmonton, Alberta,
Canada
Harvard Medical School
http://hms.harvard.edu/hms/home.asp has more
than 7,500 full-time faculty working in 11
academic departments located at the School's
Boston campus or in one of 47 hospital-based
clinical departments at 18
Harvard-affiliated teaching hospitals and
research institutes. Those affiliates
include Beth Israel Deaconess Medical
Center, Brigham and Women's Hospital,
Cambridge Health Alliance, Children's
Hospital Boston, Dana-Farber Cancer
Institute, Forsyth Institute, Harvard
Pilgrim Health Care, Hebrew SeniorLife,
Joslin Diabetes Center, Judge Baker
Children's Center, Immune Disease Institute,
Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary,
Massachusetts General Hospital, McLean
Hospital, Mount Auburn Hospital, Schepens
Eye Research Institute, Spaulding
Rehabilitation Hospital, and VA Boston
Healthcare System.
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