source:
http://www.cultureshocktv.com/internews/2002/aug17200261061.shtml
THE LILLY SUICIDES
WARNING: ANTI-DEPRESSANTS MAY BE HAZARDOUS TO YOUR HEALTH
Posted by:
CULTURESHOCKTV.COM
Sat Aug 17 2002
By Richard DeGrandpre
The Witness
In the final days of the 20th century, a North Wales psychiatrist named David
Healy conducted a curious study, and with more than a curious result. Twenty
volunteers with no history of psychiatric problems were recruited, half of whom
were given the drug Zoloft, an antidepressant from the Prozac family of drugs
known as the SSRIs, or "selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors." The other half
were given an antidepressant that, unlike Zoloft and Prozac, does not
selectively target the brain chemical serotonin. Each group took their
respective drug for two weeks and then, shortly thereafter, switched to the
other.
Healy had designed his "healthy volunteer study" to compare the psychological
experience of being on a serotonin antidepressant versus a non-serotonin
antidepressant, but before he knew it, two of his volunteers became dangerously
agitated and suicidal. Both were taking the SSRI drug. The adverse reactions
couldn't easily be blamed on psychological instability -- these were healthy
volunteers. And the rate of 10 percent made it clear that such results were not
so rare as to be incidental.
Healy was surprised at the effect, but he would not stay surprised. Some months
later, when serving as an expert witness in a civil action against Zoloft's
manufacturer, Pfizer, Healy obtained access to the company archives. There he
discovered an unpublished study from the 1980s in which healthy female
volunteers were given either Zoloft or a placebo. The study was canceled four
days later, after all those taking Zoloft began complaining of agitation and
apprehension. Healy's case was not so bad; in fact, some of his volunteers rated
Zoloft positively. Of the two who did not, one was a 30-year-old woman who,
within two weeks of starting the drug, became obsessed with the idea that she
should throw herself in front of a car. "It was as if there was nothing out
there apart from the car which she was going to throw herself under," Healy
reported. "She didn't think of her partner or child."
The Zoloft case was not Healy's first involvement in a civil action against an
SSRI manufacturer. Earlier, he had been involved in a wrongful death suit
against Eli Lilly, the maker of the much celebrated SSRI drug Prozac. An
internationally renowned psychiatrist as well as a historian of psychiatric
medicine, Healy's recruitment onto the plaintiffs' side was a small but
significant victory. Prior to his involvement as an expert witness, Healy had
already raised a number of questions about the SSRIs, including the possibility
that they might produce agitation and other problems with an unusual frequency,
sometimes leading to suicide. Healy was also ideal because he's not a radical or
an outsider; he has done research and consulting for various drug companies, and
has himself prescribed SSRIs and other psychiatric drugs. In fact, he had been
consulted on several SSRI suicide cases in which he had concluded that the SSRIs
were not at fault.
This view changed, however, with the case of William Forsyth.
The Victims
William Forsyth met and married his wife June in 1955. After two years of
military service in West Germany, Bill and June moved to Los Angeles, where Bill
had grown up. After arriving, Bill started a rental car business, and the couple
had two kids, Susan and Bill Jr. The business and other investments continued to
grow, and in 1986 the Forsyths cashed in. Four years later, Bill and June
retired to Maui, the Hawaiian island that their son called home. Bill was 61 at
the time. June was 54.
Despite the romance of a new life, the transition was difficult for Bill
Forsyth. Personal difficulties led to marital difficulties. Marriage counseling
seemed to help, though, and by the next year there was a general sense that Bill
was on the mend. Three years after the move to Hawaii, however, with Bill still
feeling unsettled, a local psychiatrist prescribed Prozac. The psychiatrist, who
had been seeing Bill since the previous year, did not believe Bill to be either
seriously depressed or suicidal.
After his first day on the drug, Bill was feeling as you might expect if you've
read Peter Kramer's Listening to Prozac -- he was "better than well." The next
day, however, he felt horrible, and for the first time put himself under
hospital care. Ten days later, Bill felt well enough to leave the hospital, but
was still taking Prozac. Everyone seemed to agree that he was doing better, and
the family scheduled a boat trip for the next day. When his parents failed to
show up that afternoon, Bill Jr. went to their home, where he found both his
parents lying dead in a pool of blood. Eleven days after starting on Prozac,
Bill Forsyth had taken a serrated knife from the kitchen and stabbed his wife 15
times. He had then taken the knife, fixed it to a chair, and impaled himself on
it.
Depressed people sometimes do desperate things. Yet these were senseless acts
that were simply unimaginable to those who knew Bill Forsyth. For his two grown
children, the only possible explanation was the drug. They decided to sue.
The Forsyth case was not the first wrongful death suit to be brought against Eli
Lilly. By the fall of 1994, a year after the Forsyth murder-suicide, there were
already 160 cases filed against Lilly, linking Prozac to homicides, suicides,
and other violence. Many of these cases were dismissed; others ended with cash
settlements. But Lilly had not lost a Prozac case, and was determined to keep it
that way. By the mid-1990s, Prozac sales were worth $2 billion per year, or
about a third of all Lilly's income.
In March 1999, with Susan and Bill Jr. refusing to settle, the Forsyth case
finally made it to trial in United States District Court in Honolulu. "I know
that with all their power and money I don't have much of a chance," said Susan
at the time, "but I feel like I have to try." With David Healy serving as an
expert witness, the Forsyths' lawyers went on to argue that the Prozac family of
drugs can produce a kind of psychological hijacking -- a bizarre and nightmarish
syndrome marked by suicidal thoughts, extreme agitation, emotional blunting, and
a craving for death. They also argued that the company knew of these risks and,
instead of warning doctors to look out for them, worked vigilantly to sweep them
under the rug.
The Evidence
Though Prozac is one of the world's best-known commodities, its most terrifying
potential side effect, "akathisia," remains virtually unknown. Akathisia has
been described as a unique form of inner torture that, prior to the development
of psychiatric drugs, probably never existed. Knowledge of the side effect,
however, has been around for a while. In 1978, 10 years before "fluoxetine"
would be brought to the U.S. market and become the bestseller known as Prozac,
initial clinical trails had already warned of akathisia and other problems.
Minutes from Lilly's Prozac project team in that year noted, "Some patients have
converted from severe depression to agitation within a few days; in one case the
agitation was marked and the patient had to be taken off [the] drug ... There
have been a fairly large number of reports of adverse reactions."
As the Forsyth case and others would go on to show, Lilly's internal records
revealed considerable awareness within the company. A letter sent to it from the
British Committee on Safety of Medicines in 1984 reads: "During the treatment
with [Prozac] 16 suicide attempts were made, two of these with success. As
patients with a risk of suicide were excluded from the studies, it is probable
that this high proportion can be attributed to an action of the preparation."
Similar concern was expressed by German authorities in 1985, where Prozac is
sold as "Fluctin," and with required warnings of possible akathisia and suicide.
A Lilly document dated from March of that year even quantifies the problem,
suggesting a rate of suicide for Prozac 5.6 times higher than for the
antidepressants that were popular before the rise of the SSRIs -- the tricyclics.
"The benefits vs. risks considerations for fluoxetine [Prozac] currently does
not fall clearly in favor of the benefits," the document concludes. By 1986,
clinical-trial studies comparing Prozac with other antidepressants showed a rate
of 12.5 suicides per 1,000 users compared to only 3.8 per 1,000 on older, non-SSRI
antidepressants, and 2.5 per 1,000 on placebos.
After Prozac's entry into the market in 1988, reports quickly surfaced to
confirm that the beast Lilly saw in the laboratory had now, without warning,
been unleashed upon the public. In 1990, a report appeared in the American
Journal of Psychiatry on the "Emergence of Intense Suicidal Preoccupation During
Fluoxetine Treatment." Two Harvard psychiatrists and a registered nurse
described cases in which patients developed serious preoccupations with suicide
soon after being given Prozac. "We were especially surprised to witness the
emergence of intense, obsessive, and violent suicidal thoughts in these
patients," they commented. "It was also remarkable how violent these thoughts
were. Two patients fantasized, for the first time, about killing themselves with
a gun, and one patient actually placed a loaded gun to her head. One patient
needed to be physically restrained to prevent self-mutilation."
Two years later, in July 1992, another article appeared, this time in the
Archives of General Psychiatry. Again, the article had two senior researchers
among its authors, one of whom was a leading expert on akathisia. The
psychiatrists stressed in the report that, prior to going on Prozac, none of
their patients had a history of significant suicidal behavior. "All described
their distress [while on Prozac] as an intense and novel somatic-emotional
state; all reported an urge to pace that paralleled the intensity of the
distress; all experienced suicidal thoughts at the peak of their restless
agitation; and all experienced a remission of their agitation, restlessness,
pacing urge, and suicidality after the fluoxetine [Prozac] was discontinued."
The finding that these problems emerge soon after an SSRI drug is taken, and
then disappear soon after the drug is withdrawn, provides compelling evidence
that the problem is often the drug and not, as the makers of SSRIs have
insisted, the depression. Anthony Rothschild and Carol Locke, also of Harvard
Medical School, reported three such cases in the Journal of Clinical Psychiatry
in 1991. All three individuals had previously attempted suicide while being
treated with Prozac -- in fact, each had jumped from great heights and had
managed to survive. In turn, all three had been put back on Prozac, only to
complain of the same strange desire to kill themselves.
"I tried to kill myself because of these anxiety symptoms. It was not so much
the depression," said one of the individuals, a 25-year-old woman. Another, a
47-year-old man, complained that "this is exactly what happened the last time I
was on [Prozac], and I feel like jumping off a cliff again." Reflecting on these
cases, the Harvard researchers stressed that patients need to know that such
overwhelming symptoms are the side effects of medication, and are treatable.
"Our patients had concluded their illness had taken such a dramatic turn for the
worse that life was no longer worth living."
The Accused
Reports that Prozac might be unsafe at any dose had Lilly running scared. As
early as 1990, one executive stated in an internal memo that, if Prozac is taken
off the market, the company could "go down the tubes." With the U.S. Food and
Drug Administration asking questions, Lilly was pressed to show that their drug
was safe. The result was published on Sept. 21, 1991.
Authored by Lilly employees, the report claimed to represent all existing data
comparing Prozac with either older antidepressants or placebos. In fact, the
data had been hand-picked to favor the drug and the company. The analysis dealt
with 3,065 patients, less than 12 percent of the total data from Prozac studies
at the time. Among those whose data were left out was the very population most
likely to become suicidal -- the 5 or so percent of patients who dropped out of
the clinical trials because they experienced unpleasant side effects after
taking Prozac.
The Lilly study was rejected by the New England Journal of Medicine. Publication
in the British Medical Journal was not as high profile, but it would have to do.
And it did. With the study in hand, and with repeated assurances from Lilly that
its drug was safe, the FDA's Psychopharmacological Drugs Advisory Committee gave
the drug a clean bill of health in September 1991, concluding that there was "no
credible evidence of a causal link between the use of antidepressant drugs,
including Prozac, and suicidality or violent behavior." Prozac was saved.
It was not until trials like the Forsyth case that Lilly's internal documents
would surface, revealing the depth of the deception. This included statements
from the Prozac working group in 1978, acknowledging problems with akathisia and
drug-induced psychosis. Also among the documents was evidence that the company
had drafted (but later abandoned) a package insert for Prozac stating that,
"Mania and psychosis may be precipitated in susceptible patients by
antidepressant therapy." And there was a memo dated Oct. 2, 1990, which
referenced an upcoming Prozac symposium. "The question is what to do with the
'big' numbers on suicidality," the memo states. "If the report numbers are shown
next to those for nausea, they seem small."
The Lilly papers also contain a series of memos referencing a study by two
Taiwanese doctors entitled "Suicidal attempts and fluoxetine (Prozac)
treatment." In a 1992 memo, a Lilly employee reports, "Mission accomplished.
Professor Lu will not present or publish his fluoxetine [Prozac] vs. maprotiline
suicidality data." In a similar case, Lilly lawyers obtained a cease-and-desist
order against Robert Bourguignon, a Belgian doctor who was soliciting his
colleagues' impressions regarding Prozac side effects. Bourguignon eventually
prevailed, and his survey, "Dangers of Fluoxetine," appeared in The Lancet in
1997.
Lilly's response to "Prozac suicide" court cases was equally forceful. In the
first case to go to trial, known as the Wesbecker case, Lilly appeared to score
a victory, only to have the judge, John Potter, declare later that the case had
been won under pretense. What Potter had learned was that Lilly had settled the
case during the trial, paying a huge sum in exchange for the plaintiffs' keeping
the settlement a secret. This sleight of hand occurred immediately after Potter
had decided to allow the plaintiffs' lawyers to present evidence of past
criminal behavior on the part of Eli Lilly. After discovering the secret
settlement, Potter fought to change the verdict, and eventually succeeded in the
Kentucky Supreme Court. The case had not been won, but settled. This was,
however, too little, too late. Lilly had achieved its objective -- to avoid
losing even a single Prozac lawsuit.
The Reckoning
Michael Grinfeld summed up Lilly's legal situation well, and prophetically,
writing in California Lawyer magazine in 1998: "Lilly may eventually face a
court judgment in a Prozac case, but it has succeeded beyond all expectations in
postponing that day." Indeed it has. On April 2, 1999, despite David Healy's
testimony and the surfacing of the Lilly papers, the jury in the Forsyth trial
found in favor of Eli Lilly. In the eyes of the jury, Prozac did not cause Bill
Forsyth to kill his wife and then himself.
While Lilly has continued to survive all legal challenges to date, not all
plaintiffs' cases involving the SSRIs have ended in defeat. In May 2001,
Australian David Hawkins was freed from prison after a supreme court judge said
it was "overwhelmingly probable" that Hawkins would not have killed his wife or
attempted suicide had he not been using Zoloft. In another 2001 case, a Wyoming
court found against GlaxoSmithKline, maker of the SSRI Paxil. The jury found
that Paxil can cause some individuals to commit suicide and homicide, and had
done exactly that in the case of 60-year-old Donald Schell. After complaining of
anxiety, stress, and possible depression, Schell had been prescribed Paxil by
his family doctor. Two days later, Schell shot to death his wife, his daughter,
his infant granddaughter, and then himself. David Hawkins, too, had committed
homicide after his first two days of SSRI treatment.
Stories like these litter the communities of North America and Europe, most of
them concealed behind the confusion and secrecy that so often mark sudden family
tragedies. By the spring of 1999, 2,000 suicides by Prozac users had been
reported to the Food and Drug Administration, at least a quarter of which
appeared to be linked to agitation and akathisia. According to the FDA's own
estimate, only about 1 percent of serious side effects are ever reported on its
"adverse event system." This means that, as David Healy has concluded, as many
as 50,000 akathisia-related suicides had taken place by 1999. The total estimate
for all SSRIs would of course be much larger.
In the face of such statistics, and with the loss of their exclusive patent on
fluoxetine, Lilly announced in December 2001 that it planned to bring another
antidepressant to market late in 2002. Not surprisingly, the new drug,
duloxetine, does not selectively target serotonin. The SSRIs, once hailed as a
revolution in the treatment of depression, are now in the process of being
phased out. Oddly, this is making way for pharmaceuticals that act in
essentially the same way as the drugs that the SSRIs originally replaced. Given
this backward trend, one is left to wonder whether all the death and misery
linked to the SSRIs might have been for naught. If so, a final conclusion seems
unavoidable: that next to Big Tobacco and the marketing of cigarettes, the
selling of the SSRIs is perhaps the deadliest marketing scandal of the 20th
century.

The Lilly Response
The following is a response to "The Lilly Suicides" offered by the
communications office of Eli Lilly.
The safety of Prozac for the treatment of depression, obsessive-compulsive
disorder, bulimia, and panic disorder is thoroughly documented. More than 40
million patients worldwide have taken Prozac since it first came to market in
Belgium in 1986 and more than 12,000 patients have participated in Prozac
clinical trials. Thousands of scientific papers have referenced Prozac, making
it among the most studied medications in history.
There is no credible scientific evidence that establishes a causal connection
between Prozac and violent or suicidal behavior. To the contrary, scientific
evidence shows that Prozac and other antidepressant medications appear to
protect against these behaviors.
Depression is a serious, life-threatening medical condition characterized by a
variety of symptoms. Suicidal thinking and suicidal acts are symptoms of
depression -- they are caused by the disease, not by the medicines used to treat
it. In clinical trials, Prozac has been shown to decrease both suicidality and
aggression.
Moreover, in September 1991, a panel of experts appointed by the FDA found no
credible evidence of a causal link between the use of antidepressant drugs,
including Prozac, and suicidal or violent behavior.
A study published in the December 1997 issue of the Archives of General
Psychiatry indicated that Prozac actually reduces aggressive and suicidal
thoughts and behavior. A study published in the February 1999 edition of the
American Journal of Psychiatry concluded there is "no support to the speculation
that fluoxetine (Prozac) increases the risk of suicide."
Fluoxetine, the active ingredient in Prozac, currently is approved for use in
patients 18 years of age and older who suffer from depression, obsessive
compulsive disorder, bulimia, panic disorder, and premenstrual dysphoric
disorder (PMDD, as Sarafem™). Lilly does not promote the product's use in any
other patient population.

Windows to Madness
The psychiatric industry has a shadow culture, a surprisingly large and active
base of self-proclaimed survivors, refuseniks, outsiders, dissident scholars,
and prideful lunatics. Below, seven groups on the path to a new normal.
Support Coalition
International - The epicenter of the "mad movement," SCI unites 100
international grassroots groups for people struggling with or falling out of the
psychiatric system. Check out their on-line Mad Market -- "a little library of
dangerous books."
National Empowerment Center
- A technical assistance center run by psychiatric survivors, providing the
means for total, self-directed recovery in a disordered world. Center for the
Study of Psychiatry and Psychology Founded by maverick psychiatrist Peter
Breggin, the ICSPP is a network of dissident psychiatrists, psychologists, and
therapists who watchdog the impact of mental health theory and practice upon
individual well-being, liberty, and family and community values. Revolution,
from the inside.
International Community
for Ecopsychology - Ecopsychology asks a simple question: does damage to --
or preservation of -- the physical environment affect the human psyche?
Surprise, surprise: there's growing evidence that a degraded environment is hard
on the brain. Check this site for research, readings, links, and luminaries.
Runaway House (Weglaufhaus)
- One of the first anti-psychiatric institutions to get official support as a
mental health center, Runaway House in Berlin, Germany, is a pioneer in the
booming network of grassroots recovery centers for people in psychic crisis.
Survivor's Art
Foundation - is a starting point for anyone interested in the pen, the
paintbrush, or the sculptor's knife as a means of mental recovery. One result? A
striking website gallery of writing and art.
www.ect.org Electro-convulsive therapy (shock
treatment) is back in vogue, supported by new research and claims of kinder,
gentler techniques. If that isn't controversial enough, its frequent use as a
forced treatment presses heavy civil-rights questions. Enter
www.ect.org, the locus of dedicated opponents,
many of whom have been zapped themselves.

Universal Declaration of Mental Rights and Freedoms
We hold this truth: That all human beings are created different. That every
human being has the right to be mentally free and independent.
That every human being has the right to feel, see, hear, sense, imagine,
believe or experience anything at all, in any way, at any time.
That every human being has the right to behave in any way that does not harm
others or break fair and just laws.
That no human being shall be subjected without consent to incarceration,
restraint, punishment, or psychological or medical intervention in an attempt to
control, repress or alter the individual's thoughts, feelings or experiences.

Richard DeGrandpre is the author of Ritalin Nation (1999) and
Digitopia (2001), and is currently writing a history of drugs in the 20th
century. "The Lilly Suicides" first appeared in Adbusters Magazine.
Write to Richard DeGrandpre at
rdegrandpre@hotmail.com