Literature DB >> 16219647

BiDil: race medicine or race marketing?

Pamela Sankar1, Jonathan Kahn.   

Abstract

Recent Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval of the first drug with a race-specific indication has fueled the controversy over the meaning of race and ethnicity and raised questions over whether this move should be seen as an advance or a setback in the struggle to address disparities in health status associated with race. The drug, BiDil, combines two generics long recognized as benefiting patients with heart failure, irrespective of race or ethnicity. The push to bring these drugs to market as a race-specific treatment was motivated by the culiarities of U.S. patent law and willingness exploit race to gain commercial and regulatory advantage.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16219647     DOI: 10.1377/hlthaff.w5.455

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Aff (Millwood)        ISSN: 0278-2715            Impact factor:   6.301


  10 in total

1.  The impact of incremental innovation in biopharmaceuticals: drug utilisation in original and supplemental indications.

Authors:  Ernst R Berndt; Iain M Cockburn; Karen A Grépin
Journal:  Pharmacoeconomics       Date:  2006-12       Impact factor: 4.981

Review 2.  Within and beyond the communal turn to informed consent in industry-sponsored pharmacogenetics research: merits and challenges of community advisory boards.

Authors:  Hojjat Soofi; Evert van Leeuwen
Journal:  J Community Genet       Date:  2016-08-05

3.  Pharmacogenomic technologies: a necessary "luxury" for better global public health?

Authors:  Catherine Olivier; Bryn Williams-Jones
Journal:  Global Health       Date:  2011-08-24       Impact factor: 4.185

4.  The Myth of Innate Racial Differences Between White and Black People's Bodies: Lessons From the 1793 Yellow Fever Epidemic in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Authors:  Rana Asali Hogarth
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2019-08-15       Impact factor: 9.308

5.  BiDil in the Clinic: An Interdisciplinary Investigation of Physicians' Prescription Patterns of a Race-Based Therapy.

Authors:  Koffi N Maglo; Jack Rubinstein; Bin Huang; Richard F Ittenbach
Journal:  AJOB Empir Bioeth       Date:  2014-10-02

6.  Race and the natural history of chronic heart failure: a propensity-matched study.

Authors:  Giovanni Gambassi; Syed Abbas Agha; Xuemei Sui; Clyde W Yancy; Javed Butler; Grigorios Giamouzis; Thomas E Love; Ali Ahmed
Journal:  J Card Fail       Date:  2008-05-27       Impact factor: 5.712

7.  Race and ancestry in biomedical research: exploring the challenges.

Authors:  Timothy Caulfield; Stephanie M Fullerton; Sarah E Ali-Khan; Laura Arbour; Esteban G Burchard; Richard S Cooper; Billie-Jo Hardy; Simrat Harry; Robyn Hyde-Lay; Jonathan Kahn; Rick Kittles; Barbara A Koenig; Sandra Sj Lee; Michael Malinowski; Vardit Ravitsky; Pamela Sankar; Stephen W Scherer; Béatrice Séguin; Darren Shickle; Guilherme Suarez-Kurtz; Abdallah S Daar
Journal:  Genome Med       Date:  2009-01-21       Impact factor: 11.117

8.  Two Threats to Precision Medicine Equity.

Authors:  Dayna Bowen Matthew
Journal:  Ethn Dis       Date:  2019-12-12       Impact factor: 2.006

Review 9.  Health is still social: contemporary examples in the age of the genome.

Authors:  Timothy H Holtz; Seth M Holmes; Seth Holmes; Scott Stonington; Leon Eisenberg
Journal:  PLoS Med       Date:  2006-10       Impact factor: 11.069

10.  The Time Is Now: Racism and the Responsibility of Emergency Medicine to Be Antiracist.

Authors:  Nicole M Franks; Katrina Gipson; Sheri-Ann Kaltiso; Anwar Osborne; Sheryl L Heron
Journal:  Ann Emerg Med       Date:  2021-06-24       Impact factor: 5.721

  10 in total

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