Posted on 02/23/2005 11:47:30 PM PST by neverdem
THE CONSUMER
Five popular heartburn drugs work in essentially the same way, but only one of them, Prilosec, is sold without a prescription. Does that mean it is not as effective as the others? No, doctors say, Prilosec works just as well as the prescription drugs for most people - but only if they can get their hands on it.
The pills are in such short supply that many drugstores are asking customers to wait two weeks or more for fresh stocks. Some patients have tracked down the medicine by calling around to other stores or shopping on eBay. Others have switched to prescription brands like Prevacid, Nexium, Aciphex and Protonix, which cost five to six times as much.
The drugs belong to a class known as proton pump inhibitors, or P.P.I.'s.
But another alternative is to switch to less powerful and less expensive over-the-counter acid blockers like Zantac or Tagamet, or even old-fashioned antacids like Rolaids and Pepto-Bismol, which doctors say offer relief to many people with mild to moderate heartburn.
One side effect of the shortage, in other words, may be to demonstrate that P.P.I.'s are often not the most economical choice.
"Saying they are the right treatment for heartburn is a little like saying that driving a Rolls-Royce to the supermarket is the best way to get there," said Dr. Jerry Avorn, an internist at Brigham and Women's Hospital, in Boston, who wrote "Powerful Medicines: The Benefits, Risks and Costs of Prescription Drugs." "At current prices, it is wasteful and irrational for them to be the first thing that a patient or a doctor thinks of whenever they see a bellyache."
Americans spent $13.5 billion on prescription P.P.I.'s in 2003, making them the second biggest-selling class of drugs, after cholesterol-lowering medicines, according to NDCHealth, a healthcare information company. The drugs are used to treat GERD (gastroesophageal reflux disease), whose chief symptom is recurring heartburn, and to heal the esophageal sores it can cause.
More than 60 million Americans suffer from GERD at least monthly, according to the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases. "These conditions are so common and the drugs are so safe that patients go through them like water," said Dr. Nicholas Shaheen, director of the Center for Esophageal Diseases and Swallowing at the University of North Carolina.
Demand for proton pump inhibitors has been fueled by a barrage of advertisements. AstraZeneca, which makes Nexium, spent more than $110 million on television commercials for the "purple pill" last year, according The AARP Watchdog Report.
AstraZeneca also makes Prilosec, the best-selling prescription drug before it went over the counter less than two years ago. Chemically, the two drugs are distinct, but they keep stomach cells from producing acid in a similar manner. And doctors say they work equally well for a great majority of patients. "Unless your condition is very bad, you're going to do pretty well on either drug," Dr. Shaheen said.
Prevacid, Aciphex and Protonix, the other prescription P.P.I.'s, also work in basically the same way. "There are certainly chemical differences between them, but no significant clinical differences, provided the doses are the same," said Dr. Steven F. Moss, a gastroenterologist at Brown Medical School.
Prilosec is approved by the Food and Drug Administration for self-treatment of frequent heartburn, which, if it occurs at least twice a week, falls under the definition of GERD. Prilosec use should be limited to one 14-day course every four months.
The over-the-counter medicine does not pose any special danger with longer use. But people whose heartburn persists longer than two weeks should see a doctor to check for more severe problems, like scarring in the throat or Barrett's esophagus, a precancerous disorder.
Doctors often prescribe or recommend P.P.I.'s without conducting any diagnostic test for GERD, like an endoscopy, figuring that success with the medicine will demonstrate that the patient's problem was excess acid. Patients then often continue taking the drugs for months or years.
But half of the people who have GERD can get relief instead from H2 blockers, the class of acid-reducing drugs that includes Zantac and Tagamet. The H2 blockers work faster, while P.P.I.'s need a day or two to take effect.
Prescription P.P.I.'s cost about $4 a pill. A Prilosec is 65 to 80 cents. Zantac, Tagamet and similar medicines are available over the counter for 20 to 35 cents each.
Cheaper still are Rolaids, Alka-Seltzer, Maalox and Pepto-Bismol, antacids that can quickly calm occasional cases of heartburn. And even cheaper are changes in behavior, like cutting back on caffeine, nicotine, alcohol and spicy foods, avoiding eating within a few hours of bedtime and losing weight.
But such changes may not help people with severe GERD. "Of course, you want people to stop smoking and lose weight, but the idea that that's going to stop their reflux may be a pipe dream," said Dr. Stuart Jon Spechler, chief of gastroenterology at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Dallas.
Only 2 to 3 percent of P.P.I. users suffer side effects, mainly headaches and diarrhea, so the issue of safety usually does not prompt doctors to turn to less potent drugs. Insurers have begun pushing physicians to consider the cost. Georgia Medicaid, for example, requires that doctors try treating patients with H2 blockers before resorting to P.P.I.'s. In 2002, this rule saved the state $20.6 million, said Dr. Tom Delate, who reviewed Georgia's drug costs for Express Scripts, a pharmacy benefits manager.
Procter & Gamble, which markets Prilosec, has been working with AstraZeneca to ease the shortage. A P&G spokesman said shelves should be stocked in two to three months.
Fennel tea, or chewing fennel seeds after the meal.
FReepmail me if you want on or off my health and science ping list.
Is Maalox really cheaper than a 20 cent pill? The brand name stuff sells for about 4 dollars an 8 ounce bottle. That's 50 cents for the usual tablespoon dose. And Pepto Bismol isn't an antacid, at least it doesn't say so on the bottle.
duh not 50cents, 25. my math stinx
Boy, am I glad OTC Prilosec is back in stock (was tired of buying it from eBay or ordering generic omeprazol from Mexico).
It is also the fastest, providing nearly instant relief.
They claim it's good for heartburn. It's the calcium carbonate, although that's described as an inactive ingredient. That's how Pepto Bismol functions as an antacid. IIRC, Bismuth subsalicylate sounds like a salt of a weak organic acid, i.e. salicylic acid. Acetylsalicylic acid, aka ASA, is aspirin. Hence the warnings about Reye's syndrome.
Wal-Mart sells a generic brand of Zantac for $4.95 for 30 pills. Works just as well as the name brand. They also sell a generic Claritin for half the cost of the name brand.
Really? I'll check that out. Thanks.
Interesting to note that if you go to www.prilosec.com, you get a web page for Nexium.
I did Aciphex, but at $4 per pill per day, it was too costly (no prescription insurance coverage).
I did the Prilosec, and it worked ok, starting day 2, for the 14 days of the 'program'. Two days after I ended the 14-day program, stomach acid burning returned. Couldn't repeat Prilosec for 4 months.
Walmart has a generic Zantac for about 10-cents per pill. It is about half-strength of the prescription form of Ranitidine. Fred's (discount store) has their brand of Tagamet for about 10-cents per pill.
Losing weight and not overeating can also stave off heartburn. In addition to some other medical problems as well :)
Calcium is the major ingredient in most OTC antacids.
Interesting side note on Pepto (and store-brand quivalents). Bismuth subsalicylate, one of the major ingredients, is about the only 'medication' that is effective (in high doses -- 6 tablets or 6 t-spoons per day for 21 days with an additional complement of antibiotics) against the Helicobacter pylori (H. Pylori) bacteria that causes a stomach ulcers.
I used to have fairly moderate heartburn, mainly because I have no gallbladder. I take about 4 generic dollar store zantacs($1.95 for 30) a week, mainly when I eat foods I know will cause trouble, and they control it just fine.
I have always had upset stomach problems and he said I should go check if I have the bacteria. I am a little averse to losing my taste though :(
Baking soda is the cheapest and fastest, but I have heard stories of peoples stomachs exploding because they couldn't belch the gas out. Be careful.
`I use baking soda as my emergency med, but I have a presecription for aciphex. Most often, though, I take pepcid. Nexium gives me bad side effects,protonix makes my heart race, prevacid worked fine, but you can never find it on the shelves.
The best herbal I have found that works is a tea from Traditional Medicines called Mother's Milk Tea...it's fennel, Anise, and some other stuff that's good for the tummy...
And real ginger ale or beer, like Reeds.
I have some gerds, and get scoped evry now and then.
But for emergency heartburn, baking soda works great!
Prilosec does it for me ! Dr. approves,too. (Peptic ulcer.)
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