home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=90TT2985>
- <link 91TT0107>
- <link 90TT0575>
- <title>
- Nov. 08, 1990: A Perilous Gap
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Nov. 08, 1990 Special Issue - Women:The Road Ahead
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SELF & SOCIETY, Page 66
- MEDICINE
- A Perilous Gap
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Many drugs are tested on men only, creating grave doubts for
- female patients
- </p>
- <p>By Andrew Purvis--With reporting by Julie Johnson/Washington
- </p>
- <p> One morning two years ago, a 60-year-old woman in Madison,
- Wis., asked her doctor what seemed like a simple question. The
- patient had just reached menopause and wanted to know whether
- she should start taking aspirin daily. She had seen newspaper
- and TV reports claiming that the pills lower the risk of heart
- attacks, and she knew such risks increase dramatically for women
- after they stop menstruating. "My answer was dead silence," says
- the woman's physician, Dr. Elizabeth Karlin, who teaches at the
- University of Wisconsin medical school. A week later, after
- scouring the literature, Karlin came to what she called an
- "appalling" conclusion: the finding, trumpeted in some
- newspapers as a lifesaver for everyone, was based entirely upon
- research on men. "There were simply no data to say this was safe
- for women."
- </p>
- <p> Karlin had discovered an information gap that may be
- endangering millions of American women. A number of treatments
- now recommended for men and women--from cholesterol-lowering
- drugs and diets to AIDS therapies and antidepressants--have
- been studied almost exclusively in men. Little hard evidence
- exists about their efficacy or safety for women. The problem has
- begun to concern doctors, patients and now lawmakers. In June
- Congress's General Accounting Office released a report
- condemning the National Institutes of Health (NIH) for failing
- to promote studies that took adequate account of the
- differences between the sexes. The Congressional Caucus for
- Women's Issues, which commissioned the study, introduced a $237
- million legislative package in July aimed at achieving "parity
- in medical research." Said caucus co-chair Patricia Schroeder
- of Colorado: "Doctors aren't getting the kind of guidance they
- need when they try to prescribe for women."
- </p>
- <p> Medical testing done entirely with male subjects may be
- adequate when a disease strikes women and men in the same way,
- but a growing body of research shows that this is often not the
- case. Some preliminary studies on depression, for example,
- suggest that hormonal changes in many women may lead to a
- premenstrual deepening of depression. Further research on
- appropriate doses of antidepressants throughout the menstrual
- cycle is needed, says Dr. Jean Hamilton, a Washington-based
- neuropharmacologist, to determine if female patients are
- getting adequate medication.
- </p>
- <p> Women's hearts also differ markedly from men's. Not only
- does cardiovascular disease strike women later in life, but
- blood cholesterol levels seem to play a somewhat different role
- in female patients. Dr. John Crouse, a lipids researcher at
- Bowman Gray School of Medicine in North Carolina, notes that
- women seem to be less vulnerable than men to high levels of LDL,
- the so-called bad cholesterol, and more vulnerable to low levels
- of HDL, the "good" cholesterol. Diets that reduce both levels,
- such as the one promoted by the American Heart Association, may
- actually harm women, Crouse argues. The dearth of data on women
- and heart disease may also have contributed to an alarming
- problem: women are significantly more likely than men to die
- after they undergo heart-bypass surgery. One reason, suggested
- a study last spring, is that doctors are slower to spot serious
- heart trouble in their female patients and slower to recommend
- surgery.
- </p>
- <p> Many researchers complain that the billion-dollar federal
- onslaught on AIDS has also underrepresented women. At a time
- when women are the fastest-growing group afflicted by AIDS,
- there are troubling uncertainties about whether treatments or
- the disease itself are affecting women differently from men.
- Some studies, for example, have suggested that women with the
- virus die more quickly than men, and from a somewhat different
- range of opportunistic infections. "Drugs are developed with
- incomplete data on metabolic differences between the sexes,"
- charges Congressman Henry Waxman, a major advocate for women's
- health. "This is not a question of affirmative action. It is a
- question of well-being."
- </p>
- <p> Why have women been excluded from so many studies? In the
- case of heart disease, some researchers argue that it is too
- difficult to find enough subjects with the condition, since it
- develops later in women. Also, the hormone changes of the
- menstrual cycle are thought to complicate research, raising
- costs. Perhaps most important, doctors are worried that if women
- enrolled in a clinical trial became pregnant, experimental drugs
- could endanger the fetus.
- </p>
- <p> Critics counter these arguments by asserting that it is
- worth the trouble and expense of recruiting women research
- subjects, given that women make up half the population--and
- half the taxpayers underwriting federal research. Concern for
- the fetus is often exaggerated, they say. "There is a tendency
- to think of women as walking wombs," says the University of
- Wisconsin's Karlin. Most female cardiac patients, she notes, are
- not planning to get pregnant.
- </p>
- <p> Health concerns that primarily affect women get particularly
- short shrift in the research community, many doctors say. Breast
- cancer, for example, has doubled in incidence since 1960 and is
- now killing 44,000 women each year. Yet last year the NIH spent
- just $77 million studying the ailment, including only $16
- million on basic research. Two years ago, the NIH halted a major
- study on breast cancer and low-fat diets because of cost
- considerations. "I can't believe that decision," says Dr. Mary
- Guinan, assistant director for science at the Centers for
- Disease Control. "If we could tell women that their diet lowered
- their risk, we could save thousands of lives."
- </p>
- <p> Research on contraception and menopause has also failed to
- garner many federal dollars. Though an estimated one-third of
- older women are taking hormone-replacement therapy to combat
- osteoporosis and other effects of menopause, many questions
- remain about how this treatment might alter the risks of breast
- cancer and heart disease. Says Guinan: "As doctors, we think
- we're helping women when we may actually be harming them."
- Meanwhile, no new contraceptive method has been approved in the
- U.S. since the 1960s. Overall, the NIH spends only 13% of its
- $7.7 billion budget on women's health issues, according to the
- Women's Caucus.
- </p>
- <p> Officially, the NIH has had a policy since 1986 of requiring
- grant applicants to at least "consider" including women in their
- research. But that policy has been limply enforced. In September
- NIH acting director Dr. William Raub set up a special office to
- explore the problem.
- </p>
- <p> For many experts, though, more study simply means more
- delay. Raub's likely successor, Dr. Bernadine Healy of the
- Cleveland Clinic--the first woman recommended to head the NIH--has called for "exercising relentless pressure" on
- researchers and policymakers to fully represent women in health
- studies. Until that is accomplished, it seems, doctors will have
- to decide for themselves which presents the greater risk to
- their female patients: the disease or a cure proven only for
- men.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-