Bextra and Vioxx Withdrawal Spurs Price Increase Among Rivals


The market for painkillers is huge. People don't like pain and inflammation, and last year Americans spent nearly $4 billion on just two of them ? Vioxx and Bextra. Those two drugs, part of a family of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs known as COX-2 inhibitors, were withdrawn from the market recently amid concerns that they can cause heart attacks and strokes. The loss of these two drugs to the marketplace is huge, as they were the two largest sellers in a fairly narrow field. COX-2 inhibitors differ from traditional non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs in that they inhibit production of the COX-2 enzyme that causes inflammation but do not interfere with COX-1, the enzyme that protects the stomach lining. Patients who use these drugs are thought to suffer less from internal discomfort and bleeding than those who took traditional anti-inflammatories, such as naproxen and ibuprofen.

With the withdrawal of these two blockbusters, patients with chronic pain, such as arthritis sufferers, are now going back to older painkillers, such as Mobic, Motrin, and Relafen. Since the more popular Vioxx and Bextra are no longer available, these older drugs are enjoying a resurgence in popularity, and sales are up across the board. So, it seems, are their prices. A recent study by a popular consumer publication shows that prices of some three dozen anti-inflammatory medications have gone up since Vioxx was withdrawn from the market in September 2004. The increases average about ten percent. Why have the prices of these older, established medications all gone up at once?

The answer, simply, is that the pharmaceutical companies have raised the prices because they can. The market for drugs is wildly competitive, and manufacturers are constantly seeking any advantage they can find in the marketplace. The sudden withdrawal of two of the most popular and profitable medications has provided a rare opportunity for manufacturers to increase both sales and prices at the same time, as the drug makers know that patients must switch to another medication. It's good for their stockholders, but bad for those who suffer from pain.

Will the high prices last? Probably not. Pricing of highly competitive medications tends to be volatile. The prices may stay up in the short term, but other medications may be introduced soon, or Bextra or Vioxx may be returned to the market. The introduction of other drugs will restore more competition to the market, and prices may drop once again. The market for painkilling drugs is a bit of a crazy one, and patients should simply exhibit some, well, patience.

©Copyright 2005 by Retro Marketing.

Charles Essmeier is the owner of Retro Marketing, a firm devoted to informational Websites, including Bextra-Info.net, a site devoted to the withdrawn drug Bextra and StructuredSettlementHelp.com, a site devoted to structured settlements.







Related News



FDA continues gathering information on cough medicine use in children - AAP News (subscription)

FDA continues gathering information on cough medicine use in children
AAP News (subscription) -8 hours ago
Cough and cold products are among the most widely used medicines in children. These drugs, which treat symptoms not the underlying disease, fall into four ...

Pediatricians and the Promotion and Support of Breastfeeding - Archives of Pediatrics

Pediatricians and the Promotion and Support of Breastfeeding
Archives of Pediatrics -5 hours ago
Author Affiliations: Division of Adolescent Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Cooper University Hospital, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New ...
Adult medicine enters the medical homeAAP News (subscription)
all 2 news articles

Most Patients Should Be Screened for HIV, Physicians’ Group Says - New York Times

TheMedGuru

Most Patients Should Be Screened for HIV, Physicians’ Group Says
New York Times, United States -4 hours ago
Just 50 to 100 of the nation’s 5000 emergency rooms routinely test for HIV, said Dr. Richard Rothman, associate professor of emergency medicine at Johns ...
World AIDS Day Calls For HIV TestingeMaxHealth.com
Doctors: Test All Patients Over 13 for HIVWebMD
Guideline Urges HIV Tests for All Patients 13 and OlderWashington Post
MedPage Today - MarketWatch
all 55 news articles

China Medicine Corporation Awarded GSP Certification - MarketWatch

China Medicine Corporation Awarded GSP Certification
MarketWatch -11 hours ago
("China Medicine" or "the Company"), a leading developer and distributor of prescription and over the counter pharmaceuticals, traditional Chinese medicines...

Three FAAPs elected to Institute of Medicine - AAP News (subscription)

Three FAAPs elected to Institute of Medicine
AAP News (subscription) -8 hours ago
Three AAP Fellows were among 65 new members elected to the Institute of Medicine, one of the highest honors in the fields of health and medicine that ...
FELLOWS IN THE NEWSAAP News (subscription)
Lake Tahoe hosts Practical Pediatrics, offers range of seminarsAAP News (subscription)
all 3 news articles

Cardiologists Debate Expensive Heart Scans - New York Times

Cardiologists Debate Expensive Heart Scans
New York Times, United States -8 hours ago
In the latest study, published last week in The New England Journal of Medicine, researchers assessed the accuracy of CT angiography in identifying ...
Heading off heart attacks in womenChicago Daily Herald
all 3 news articles

Organogenesis Receives Two Prestigious Awards for Economic Impact ... - MarketWatch

Organogenesis Receives Two Prestigious Awards for Economic Impact ...
MarketWatch -8 hours ago
Organogenesis was the first company to successfully mass produce living regenerative medicine products -- reaching hundreds of thousands of patients in the ...


New Marketing Coaching and Consulting Firm for Physicians ... - MarketWatch

New Marketing Coaching and Consulting Firm for Physicians ...
MarketWatch -10 hours ago
"There are a growing number of physicians making the switch to concierge medicine, but they either don't know how to effectively convert their existing ...

Effort in Senegal to Join Traditional & Conventional Medicine - Voice of America

Voice of America

Effort in Senegal to Join Traditional & Conventional Medicine
Voice of America -10 hours ago
By Scott Bobb Traditional medicine was once thought of as sorcery or quackery. But the craft is slowly gaining the respect of conventional medical ...
Modern West African Market Offers Traditional Remedies for IllnessVoice of America
all 2 news articles

Spirituality, Evidence-Based Medicine, and Alcoholics Anonymous - Am J Psychiatry (subscription)

Spirituality, Evidence-Based Medicine, and Alcoholics Anonymous
Am J Psychiatry (subscription) -8 hours ago
For example, Alcoholics Anonymous (AA), a self-designated "spiritual fellowship," is a useful adjunct to the practice of evidence-based addiction medicine. ...