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Saturday, January 22, 2005

Headline that Startles Reader

Hallucinogen may reduce alcohol cravings, reads one of the headlines on one of the sites that I go to regularly.  Hmmm.  Treat an alcohol problem by administering an hallucinogen?  Seems to not make sense.  Thinking that it must be a joke, but realizing that the site never publishes jokes, and also thinking that perhaps the headline was one of those that only makes sense when you know what the story is about, but which otherwise seems to mean something else, I satisfied my curiosity by clicking on the link.  It turns out that it is not a joke, and that the headline means exactly what it appears to mean. 

There are private clinics in the Caribbean and Mexico that use an hallucinogen to treat addictions.  It turns out, though, that the treatment is not really the point of the article.  Rather, the article is about the mechanism by which the drug acts, and how that might sometime lead to a treatment for addiction that is credible and clinically useful. 
Hallucinogen may reduce alcohol cravings
21 Jan 2005
Study findings suggest that ibogaine, a natural alkaloid, may be able to reverse behaviors associated with addiction, including alcoholism.

A team from the University of California in San Francisco, USA, says that the drug reduced cravings for alcohol in rats by triggering increased production of a brain protein known to affect alcohol consumption.

Ibogaine – derived from the West African shrub Tabernanthe iboga – is used as a recreational drug and its potential for neuronal toxicity has impeded research into ibogaine's use to fight addiction. However, some private addiction clinics in the Caribbean and Mexico use it to treat patients. [...]
The neurotoxicity may explain why it is not used in the United States.  Also, it is hard to imagine how it could be helpful to treat alcoholics with a recreational drug.  Personally, I think this is another one of those articles that describes an obscure kind of basic research, concluding with the observation that the study 'someday may lead to something that actually is useful.'  As we shall see, the prospects for that are rather dim.

However, that does not mean that the drug is useless; it means that any use it may have, is limited to the laboratory.  They elaborate:
To investigate ibogaine's properties further, Patricia Janak and colleagues describe how they induced rats to drink alcohol on a daily basis. Alcohol was then withheld for 2 weeks, which normally leads to increased alcohol consumption when it becomes available. But this craving appeared to subside in rats that had been given ibogaine.

"The discovery that ibogaine reduced binge drinking after a period of abstinence was an exciting finding for us because this is the type of behavior in alcoholics for which very few drugs exist," said Janak.

Examination showed that ibogaine appears to reduce the need for alcohol consumption by increasing production of glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF), the researchers report in the Journal of Neuroscience. This effect was confirmed in cell culture studies.
Why do I say that it is unlikely that GDNF ever would make a clinically-useful treatment?  This article describes what was done to use GDNF in an experiment regarding the treatment of Parkinson disease.  Note that the treatment involves the surgical implantation of a pump that delivers the substance directly into the brain.  GDNF cannot be given orally, or even by subcutaneous injection: it cannot pass from the bloodstream into the brain.  The authors point out that this would not be practical for an ongoing treatment.  Among other problems, the patients have to refill the pumps daily. 

Generally, it is considered to be a lousy idea to give a person, known to be prone to substance abuse, a way to administer drugs directly to the brain.

So, the study is important, but not in any practical sense.  Perhaps, someday, someone can figure out exactly what GDNF does in the brain. If they can figure out how that results in a reduction in craving, it might be possible to find some nontoxic, practical compound that does the same thing.  If so, it probably will take decades to figure out, then ten or fifteen more years to develop it to the point it could be marketed.  So while the headline is not a joke, it certainly is an exaggeration. 

The take-home messages are these: Always be skeptical of articles that conclude 'someday this may lead to something that actually is useful.'   Don't check in to a reputable detox center and expect to get hallucinogenic drugs; if you want to quit drinking, you're going to have to do it the old fashioned way. 

As they say, "there is no elevator to recovery; you have to take the steps."



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Wednesday, January 19, 2005

XP13512: Drug Development News

Most often, when you see articles about drugs with names such as XP13512, chances are that the drug never will sit on a pharmacy shelf. 

In an earlier life, I was told that in some relatively nonindustrialized cultures, infants were not given names at birth.  Infant mortality was so high, that the parents would wait until the child attained an age that gave a good chance of survival.  Only then was it considered safe to give the child a name.

People in the drug development business will say that bringing a drug to market is a lot like giving birth.  Except it takes a lot longer.  Like the nonindustrialized peoples, the drug companies think it is bad luck to give real names to compounds that might not make it.  So, they come up with names that imply no emotional attachment, names like XP13512.

XP13512 has a pretty good chance of making it, despite having no real name.  It is a prodrug of gabapentin.  A little background: Gabapentin (Neurontin) was a blockbuster drug for Pfizer, but went generic late last year.  That means that sales are falling quickly.  Pfizer happened to have a new drug, pregabalin, in the pipeline.  It should be on pharmacy shelves later this year, with the brand name Lyrica.  I haven't reviewed the studies on pregabalin, although I probably will soon, and post a bit about it.  From Pfizer's website:
Once generic manufacture of gabapentin is approved, sales of Pfizer's Neurontin are likely to fall dramatically. Encouraging physicians to switch patients from Neurontin to pregabalin, if approved, will be an important strategy in minimising the impact of generic competition. Pregabalin is as effective as Neurontin, but at lower doses, which translates to fewer side effects. Thus, it is well placed to capture Neurontin's market share.
One of the factors that limits the usefulness of Neurontin is its low potency.  Patients often have to take as much as 3.6 grams (six large tablets) to get an effect.  But there is a second problem.  The human intestine typically cannot not absorb more that 3.6 grams per day.  Thus, for most patients, there is no point in trying higher doses.  There is more interesting stuff to say about Neurontin and Lyrica, but that is not the point today.



Today, I am more in the mood to write about pharmacology, otherwise known as "the fun stuff."  Pregabalin was made by modifying the chemical structure of gabapentin.  As the blurb above notes, this resulted in greater potency, and they claim a lower incidence of adverse effects. 

Another company appears to have found a different approach.  Xenoport -- a relatively small player in the industry -- developed a prodrug, XP13512.  A prodrug is a drug that may not be active in its native form, but which is changed chemically to an active compound, when it is absorbed by the patient. 

What Xenoport did, was to develop a compound that is absorbed more readily than gabapentin, which then is converted to an active compound.  This will not solve the problem of patients who develop adverse effects, but it does mean that it will be feasible to attain much higher blood levels, if necessary.  Those patients who are willing and able to tolerate higher concentrations may be able to get more benefit.  Also, since the absorption is so much better, the pills won't have to be so large.

Pregabalin will get to the market first, which is an advantage with respect to marketing.  Although it is similar to gabapentin, it will be possible to market it as "the new and improved Neurontin."  It seems that that marketing strategy only works once, though,  XP13512 is likely to be seen as a "me too" drug, an appellation that has no market appeal. 

Is there anything that Xenoport can do to overcome this?  Back to  pharmacology:  The main indication for use of XP13512, like that of pregabalin, will be the treatment of pain.  However, drugs often have more than one purpose.  Xenoport knows that the current treatment of choice for restless legs syndrome, pramipexole (Mirapex), has the unappealing adverse effect of causing the unpredictable sudden onset of sleep in a small percentage of patients.  If they can demonstrate that XP13512 is effective for RLS, but without that particular adverse effect, they can, at least partly, shake off that "me too" label.  They have reported success in a phase II trial for treatment of RLS.

Assuming that XP13512 is approved by the FDA, this will create an interesting situation: there will be three similar drugs on the market: gabapentin, which will be inexpensive, but will have the limitations noted above; pregabalin, which may be just as effective, but more expensive, and may have a lower incidence of adverse effects; and XP13512, which will have the same adverse effect profile as gabapentin, and will be expensive, but which can be given in smaller pills, with the added advantage that higher blood levels can be achieved.

For those of us who like to watch races, but think NASCAR wastes too much gasoline, it will be fun to see how the competition between gabapentin, pregabalin, and XP13512 plays out. 



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Tuesday, January 18, 2005

Quiz: Corruption Lite

Some ideas transcend political parties.  The concepts of equality and free enterprise are examples.  Perhaps there are some on the far left that might oppose free enterprise, and some on the far right who might oppose equality; but for the most part, Democrats and Republicans both would agree that equality and free enterprise are virtues.  There are times, though, when the almighty dollar transcends even those virtues. 

Now for the quiz: Who said this, where, and about what?
He appealed to the idea of free competition [...] and claimed that Villanueva's bill "breaches the principles of equality before the law, that of nondiscrimination and the right of free private enterprise, freedom of industry and of contract, protected by the Constitution."
Hints: The person who said that was supported by an American ambassador.  It was in somewhere in South America.  He was talking about software.

Governments everywhere are trying to save money.  Every once in a while, a government official gets an idea that would do just that.  The problem is, when the government saves money, often a business looses out.  Then business interests pressure the government, sometimes succeeding in getting the government to do act contrary to the interest of its citizens.

In the USA, if a company donated a lot of money to government projects, in an effort to get that government to continue to do business with the company, a lot of people would be concerned about it -- and rightly so. 

This isn't exactly the same as what I wrote about yesterday.  It is not overt corruption, in that there are no government officials who are profiting, personally, from the donations from business.  Even so, one could argue that the principles are similar.  The difference is that the business is pressuring the government to accept a short-term gain, even though the decision will cost the government a lot more in the long run.  The business gives up an amount of money -- small, relative to the long-term profit -- in exchange for a long-term lucrative business arrangement.  The people loose, and the business wins. 

Of course, if the people who stand to loose are citizens of a different country, but the business is a US corporation, then our government will go along with it.  It will even help pressure the foreign government to accept the tradeoff. 

I suppose that is an example of the moral values that we voted for in the last election.  It's not illegal, and it's good for business. 

The only down side is that people in another country end up going hungry as a result.

The answers to the quiz are: the president of Microsoft Peru, said it in Peru, about legislation that would have required the government of Peru to adopt and promote the use of open-source software.  The story is from 2002, in Wired magazine.

The same kind of thing has happened in Pakistan:
For instance, some 50,000 low-cost computers are to be installed in schools and colleges all over Pakistan. These will be PII computers, each being sourced for less than $100 a piece, he says.

Proprietary software for these PCs would cost a small fortune. Surely more than what the computers cost! But, using GNU/Linux as the OS would ensure that the overall price is kept low.
And in Spain; in Sri Lanka, there is a project that is using open-source software to help with the tsunami relief effort.  A project called Sahana is being developed that will result in the production of a free software package to facilitate management of refuge camps, tracking lost persons, etc.  The German city of Munich has adopted Linux for its municipal offices.  There are many other examples, but you can Google them as well as I can. 

Now, Bill Gates himself wants to meet with the President of Brazil in an effort to slow the open-source movement there. 

Is this the softer side of corruption?



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Sunday, January 16, 2005

Two Sides of Foreign Policy

WHEN George Bush is sworn in this Thursday for a second term in office, he will use his inauguration speech to emphasise his belief that "liberty is powerful and freedom is peace".
The citation above is from today's issue of The Scotsman.  And writing at the invitation of Foreign Policy magazine, outgoing Secretary of State Colin Powell wrote:
The United States cannot win the war on terrorism unless we confront the social and political roots of poverty. We want to bring people to justice if they commit acts of terrorism, but we also want to bring justice to people. We want to help others achieve representative government that provides opportunity and fairness. We want to unshackle the human spirit so that entrepreneurship, investment, and trade can flourish. This goal is the indispensable social and political precondition for sustainable development; it is the means by which we will uproot the social support structures of terrorism.
President Bush and Secretary Powell have voiced some powerful ideas.  Furthermore, there are actions to back up these voices.  The United States of America has had some successes in the area of foreign policy.  The victory in Afghanistan is one example, ...and when I think of a second example, I'll let you know.

Is there any reason to think that the US is really going to act in such a way as to promote the humanitarian ideals of freedom, health, and prosperity?  Perhaps.  In his essay, Powell goes on at length about the Millennium Challenge Account
Ultimately, it is not possible to separate economics from politics. We should not expect democracy to work in places where there is blatant economic injustice. We should not expect sustained economic success in places where political life remains shackled. This symbiosis between political and economic freedom is the basis for the Millennium Challenge Account (MCA), which offers a contract modeled on the free market itself—that is its genius. Recipients of MCA money have to meet a set of eligibility requirements before they get a nickel. Governments must already have in place effective policies to rule justly, invest in their people, and promote economic freedom. They must also agree to achieve measurable results from aid assistance in terms of reducing poverty and generating broad economic growth.
Personally, I think the MCA -- as presented to the public -- is a good idea.  It links foreign aid to democratic principles: countries that rule unjustly are not eligible for the aid.  In some ways, the MCA aspires to operate like the EU.  The European Union requires that a country meet certain standards, and show regular progress, before it will admit the country to its ranks. 

Mr. Powell currently is the chairman of the board of directors of the Millennium Challenge Corporation.  (The MCC is the organization that will administer the MCA.)  I am hopeful that Mr. Powell will remain involved in the organization, to assure that they follow the stated principles:
Key MCA Principles
  • Reduce Poverty through Economic Growth: The MCC will focus specifically on promoting sustainable economic growth that reduces poverty through investments in areas such as agriculture, education, private sector development, and capacity building.
  • Reward Good Policy: Using objective indicators, countries will be selected to receive assistance based on their performance in governing justly, investing their citizens, and encouraging economic freedom.
  • Operate in Partnership: Working closely with the MCC, countries that receive MCA assistance will be responsible for identifying the greatest barriers to their own development, ensuring civil society participation, and developing an MCA program. MCA participation will require a high-level commitment from the host government. Each MCA country will enter into a public Compact with the MCC that includes a multi-year plan for achieving shared development objectives and identifies the responsibilities of each partner in achieving those objectives.
  • Focus on Results: MCA assistance will go to those countries that have developed well- designed programs with clear objectives, benchmarks to measure progress, procedures to ensure fiscal accountability for the use of MCA assistance, and a plan for effective monitoring and objective evaluation of results. Programs will be designed to enable progress to be sustained after the funding under the MCA Compact has ended.
The statements by Bush and Powell, and the Principles of the MCA, represent the good dise of American foreign policy.  But I am skeptical.

Why be skeptical?  The track record of the USA in recent years has not been good.  Yes, we did a good think in Afghanistan, but we screwed up in Iraq.  The tsunami relief effort has been good, but our efforts in Haiti were miserable.  We've strengthened relations with the UK, but alienated the rest of Europe.  We torpedoed the rapprochement  between North and South Korea, inflamed the situation in Iran, all but ignored the problem in Darfur, had a minimal role in Liberia and Sierra Leone, have underfunded the promised AIDS effort, and have allowed US corporations to make obscene profits in Ivory Coast -- a country ruled by a ruthless dictator.  We let Halliburton strengthen the infrastructure of Iran, even while proclaiming Iran to be part of the Axis of Evil. 

In fact, the US government has shown a stronger commitment to advancing the profits of its major corporations, rather than advancing the principles of freedom, health, and prosperity.  

The Millennium Challenge Account, so far, has not lived up to its billing.  It was announced on March 14, 2002.  The initial announcement promised $5 billion over the next three budget cycles.  Well, we now are in 2005, only a total of $1 billion has been appropriated, and nothing actually has gone overseas.  See articles on the International Relations Center website, and the San Diego Union Tribune, for details. 

I am not trying to argue that the USA is, overall, doing badly with respect to pro-development foreign policy.  The Center for Foreign Development ranks the USA seventh in the world in this regard:

Ranking the Rich 2004
As I said, I am not arguing that the USA does poorly.  Rather, my concern is that the USA has two sides to its foreign policy.  One side is that espoused by Colin Powell: American values, security, and prosperity all can be advanced through the judicious use of foreign aid.  The other side is that which is evident in the operations of major international corporations, based in the USA.  Halliburton perhaps is the most egregious; Unocal is another example (see this for an update on the Unocal story.) 

The problem of corruption involving international corporations is not exactly news.  In fact,  USAID has made a strong statement on the issue:
Fighting High-Level Corruption a Priority For U.S. Aid Agency
USAID urges broader range of tactics to curb misconduct
14 January 2005
By Berta Gomez
Washington File Staff Writer

Washington -- The United States' global anti-corruption efforts should place greater emphasis on misconduct by high-level officials and well-connected firms, the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) says. In a new agency-wide anticorruption strategy released in January 2005, USAID said its efforts to date have tended to focus on the most visible forms of corruption, notably small transactions involving low- and mid-level officials.

"Anticorruption efforts need to be expanded to better encompass grand corruption," the agency said. "Grand" corruption covers exchanges of resources and other competitive advantages available to privileged firms and high-level officials in the executive branch, judiciary or legislature, or in political parties, USAID said.

The World Bank estimates that corruption costs the world economy about $1.5 trillion a year and reduces countries' growth rates by as much as one percentage point annually. The bank has identified corruption as the single greatest impediment to global development.
Citizens of the USA often look down their noses at poor countries, casting judgment about the corruption that impedes development in those countries.  What is ignored in this is the fact that governments are only half of the corruption problem.  Major corporations are the other half.  And many of those corporations are based in the USA. 

An international watchdog agency, Transparency International, has this to say about the subject:
TI urges western governments to oblige their oil companies to publish what they pay in fees, royalties and other payments to host governments and state oil companies. “Access to this vital information will minimise opportunities for hiding the payment of kickbacks to secure oil tenders, a practice that has blighted the oil industry in transition and post-war economies,” said Eigen.

“The future of Iraq depends on transparency in the oil sector,” added Eigen. “The urgent need to fund postwar construction heightens the importance of stringent transparency requirements in all procurement contracts,” he continued. “Without strict anti-bribery measures, the reconstruction of Iraq will be wrecked by a wasteful diversion of resources to corrupt elites.”
TI ranked the USA 17th on its list of corrupt countries; not a bad rating, although not particularly good.  (On their scale, 1 is the least corrupt.)  The index ranks the governments, not the conduct of corporations.  There is a clear link between the two, however.  According to TI:
“Corruption robs countries of their potential,” said Eigen. “As the Corruption Perceptions Index 2004 shows, oil-rich Angola, Azerbaijan, Chad, Ecuador, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Libya, Nigeria, Russia, Sudan, Venezuela and Yemen all have extremely low scores [low score=high corruption]. In these countries, public contracting in the oil sector is plagued by revenues vanishing into the pockets of western oil executives, middlemen and local officials.”

“Companies from OECD countries must fulfill their obligations under the OECD Anti-Bribery Convention and stop paying bribes at home and abroad,” said Rosa Inés Ospina Robledo. “With the spread of anti-bribery legislation, corporate governance and anti-corruption compliance codes, managers have no excuse for paying bribes.”
Thus, the ugly side of US foreign policy is hidden.  The US government tacitly allows corporations to do bad things, things which actually work against the stated goals of US foreign policy. 

Based upon this, I would argue that the oversight of international corporations should be considered to be a part of foreign policy.  After all, the US government has the authority and the responsibility to regulate these corporations, and it has a compelling interest to do so.  If fact, one could argue that the governmental regulation of international corporations actually is a part of the government's foreign policy. 

Although the current political climate generally is such that increased regulation is unpopular, let us not forget that these organizations could not function without the cooperation of the entire society.  Therefore, they owe a duty to society, to respect social norms, comply with laws, and to not interfere with the duties of the government.  This would include refraining from behavior that runs counter to the goals of foreign policy. 

Unfortunately, the tendency is for corruption to be worst in countries that have a single great source of wealth.  They do not have diversified economies.  Usually, when there is only one great source of wealth, the source of wealth is fossil fuel.  The implication is that the  international companies that do business with the most corrupt regimes are the oil companies.  And the current administration seems disinclined to pressure the oil companies.  As a result, the Administration is trying to put into place foreign policy initiatives that promote development, but at the same time, they allow companies such as Halliburton and Unocal to undermine those initiatives. 

It may seem that there is little the USA can do to stop corruption in another country.  The MCA, though, might do just that...but only if we also take steps to prevent our own companies from colluding with the corrupt regimes. 



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