It’s Not Just Venus or Mars Anymore

Dec. 5, 2014

By Medical Discovery News

It's Not Just Mars or Venus Anymore

While the gender gaps are closing, sometimes the differences between men and women seem as great as the differences between Venus and Mars. For example, men and women tolerate medications very differently. Due to this, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has recently changed the recommended dosage of the sleep aid Lunesta from two milligrams to one milligram because of its prolonged effects on women.

Women reported feeling drowsy in the morning hours after waking, raising concerns about the hazards of driving and working. While men and women are often prescribed the same dosages of medications, this case shows how men and women are not the same organism and drug dosing might need to take that into consideration.

For basic studies in the biomedical laboratory, many cells lines that are used experimentally are derived from tissues obtained from males, either human or animal. Even in the very early steps of identifying a drug and determining how it works, efforts are already focused on those of us with a Y chromosome.

Clinical trials are conducted before a new drug can be approved, and trials also favor males. In fact, white males remain the predominant subjects for drug trials today. Women were initially avoided in clinical trials because of concerns that they were pregnant or would become pregnant. Women also have cyclic hormones that alter metabolism and could interact with drugs. While this is precisely why women’s tolerance of a drug should be tested prior to its approval, researchers thought this complicated the early stages of the process. Once a drug is launched, the number of people using the drug expands and these side effects start to be reported. While an individual physician may notice patients have side effects, they do not have a wide view of the whole population’s reactions.

Pharmokinetics is the study of what happens to drugs administered to a living organism, and could explain some reasons why men and women handle the same medication differently. For starters, men and women have a number of basic physiological differences. Firstly, women tend to have a lower body weight and body volume. Therefore, the concentration of a drug is often higher in a woman. Women also have a lower gastric emptying, slower gastrointestinal motility, and different absorption rate that can alter the amount of a drug that gets to the blood and is distributed throughout the body. They have different glomerular filtration in their kidneys, which reduces the rate at which drugs are cleared out of the body and therefore leads to higher and more prolonged drug levels. Women experience greater sensitivity to beta blockers, which are used to treat heart conditions; opioids, which are used to control pain; and antipsychotics.

The pharmacodynamics (how drugs function) in female and male bodies can be quite different also. Aspirin is a great example. It is less effective at lowering subsequent heart attacks in women when given the standard preventive dose. They may need higher doses to prevent a second cardiovascular episode.

Recently, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) has required that all cell, animal, and human studies it funds have a balanced representation of both genders. While this may increase the cost of developing therapeutics, it will certainly expand our understanding of how medicines affect the genders differently and improve drugs for everyone.

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Breaking Bad at the Pharmacy

April 25, 2014

By Medical Discovery News

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Drug abuse is not confined to street drugs like methamphetamine, heroin, and cocaine. America is facing an epidemic of prescription drug abuse, particularly with pain relievers, depressants, and stimulants. In 2010, 7 million Americans abused prescription drugs every month.

People are able to abuse such medications by taking medicines prescribed for someone else, using them in excess, or by taking them in a way not prescribed, such as crushing and snorting pills or liquefying and injecting them to hasten the effects needed to produce a high.

Depressants, sedatives, and tranquilizers are abused by more than 2.5 million people each month. The mood-altering drug Zoloft ranks sixth on the list of abused pharmaceuticals and earned more than $500 million in sales. It is prescribed for depression, obsessive compulsive disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder, and social anxiety disorder. The 10th most abused prescription drug is Xanax (alprazolam), called Xany, blue footballs, Xanybars, or just bars on the street. Xanax had sales of almost $275 million in 2012. This drug is intended to treat anxiety or panic disorders. It is often abused because it creates what is described as a sense of wellbeing, but can be fatal when abused.

The sleeping pills Ambien and Lunesta are the fourth and seventh most abused drugs from the pharmacy, with sales of $670 and $450 million respectively in 2012. Both are used to treat difficulties falling or staying asleep but can produce hallucinations when abused. Tom Brokaw of NBC News inadvertently experienced these symptoms from Ambien while covering the last presidential campaign.    

Drugs used to treat attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) are also widely abused, usually by students seeking a way to stay awake and intensely focus on a project or test. Other than marijuana and synthetic marijuana, Adderall is the most-used drug by high school seniors and the eighth most abused prescription drug in the country. Its sales top $400 million. Other stimulants of the central nervous system, Ritalin and Concerta, are the third and fifth most abused pharmaceuticals. Stimulants can have significant side effects like irregular heartbeat, heart failure, seizures, and behavioral changes like paranoia or hostility. 

Some of the most abused drugs are opioid analgesics used clinically as pain relievers. These drugs are involved in 75 percent of all pharmaceutical overdose deaths – more than 16,000 people a year. An estimated 5.1 million people abuse these drugs each month. This included the most abused pharmaceutical drug – Oxycontin. In 2012, sales of this drug reached about $2.5 billion. The second most abused prescription drug, Suboxone, is used as a maintenance treatment for opioid dependence. Its sales brought in almost $1.4 billion. Another opioid, Opana ER (oxymorphone), ranks ninth on the list of most abused pharmaceuticals and is used to treat severe and chronic pain. It earned $300 million in sales in 2012.

Prescription drugs like these are a double-edged sword. They do a lot of good for a lot of people, and many genuinely need them to function. New regulations that govern the use of these drugs, while annoying for people who need them, help limit some of the abusive behavior of those breaking bad.