FDA Stayed Silent As Internal Reports About Potential Tylenol Risks Piled Up

Edgetho

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Who else is as shocked as I am?

We all know whay democrats do things..... Power or money. Preferably both.

Is the DNC in the Back Pocket of Big Pharma? One of the oldest tricks in the book is to commit a crime then start making really loud noise about accusing someone else of committing the crime.

TrUsT tHe ExPeRtS rAcIsTs

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) defied the advice of its own drug safety experts to warn pregnant women about Tylenol for nearly a decade, internal reports and presentations obtained by the Daily Caller News Foundation reveal.

FDA rank-and-file scientists repeatedly recommended the agency release information about Tylenol in pregnancy across three scientific reviews conducted in 2016, 2019, 2022 and two memos, one from the FDA's maternal health division in 2016 and one from the FDA's urological health division in 2017.

The scientific literature posits many plausible drivers of autism, the most well-established of which are genetic, and the FDA drug safety experts acknowledged that the research linking the condition to Tylenol is far from ironclad.

Still, as alarm bells rang within FDA headquarters and the boardrooms of Tylenol's manufacturers, pregnant women heard nothing from either the government or the manufacturers about the potential risks until the September announcement by President Donald Trump and Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

FDA leadership declined to update its webpage about over-the-counter painkillers in pregnancy, repeatedly falling back on language first issued in January 2015. But that statement simply acknowledged that "FDA is aware of concerns" about Tylenol and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), citing just one scientific paper.

At the urging of Trump and Kennedy, FDA finally released a nuanced statement in September cautioning pregnant women about Tylenol while acknowledging that aspirin, ibuprofen and high fevers all pose their own risks. That move was first recommended by an FDA drug safety expert nine years earlier.

The DCNF obtained the FDA documents from the law firm Keller Postman LLC, which brought a class action lawsuit against Tylenol maker Kenvue, a legally independent spinoff of Johnson & Johnson. The personal injury law firm, which often brings class action lawsuits, obtained the documents from FDA via the Freedom of Information Act.

Tylenol, a brand name for acetaminophen, first received FDA approval in 1955 before modern drug laws tightened clinical trial requirements in 1962.

Some experts argue that neurological damage occurs due to a toxic byproduct of acetaminophen called NAPQI. Babies and children with autism may struggle to metabolize the drug, resulting in higher levels of NAPQI, which kills cells.

...

An internal memo reveals that the agency first began examining acetaminophen in pregnancy 11 years ago, in May 2014, after an April 2014 study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association raised concerns about the drug and ADHD-like behaviors, prompting its sole statement on the issue for the next decade -- an 2015 FDA webpage that acknowledging that "FDA is aware of concerns" and citing that single study.

Less than two years later, in October 2016, FDA Senior Medical Officer Andrew Mosholder had reviewed eight observational studies with seven showing an association between acetaminophen and issues including attention deficits, delayed motor development and autistic behaviors.

Mosholder's 22-page report recommended that FDA issue a nuanced warning: Tylenol in pregnancy could cause neurological harm and the drug should be used sparingly, but other painkillers are associated with more definite risks and Tylenol will sometimes be necessary to reduce fever. The report also recommended more toxicology studies -- laboratory studies designed to uncover the potential toxicity of a drug.

Mosholder declined to comment.

...


In January 2018, an FDA decision-making committee led by longtime Center for Drug Evaluation and Research Director (CDER) Janet Woodcock heard a presentation by Mosholder and Valerie Pratt, who oversaw the safety of over-the-counter drugs, according to the meeting minutes. By this time the scientists had reviewed 21 studies, three-fourths of which indicated a risk of Tylenol in pregnancy, the slides show.

FDA had preemptively ruled out a drug label change, but Woodcock and other FDA officials also nixed Mosholder's proposed public statement, instead postponing a decision by six months and calling for yet more studies, the meeting minutes show.

...

Woodcock oversaw CDER during other controversial decisions over her lengthy tenure, including the approval of OxyContin in 1996, government records show, and defended the approval as following "all applicable statutes and regulations" in a 2020 Senate letter. She also delayed a clinical warning about the risk of heart issues and the COVID-19 mRNA vaccines in 2021, according to a Senate investigation.


CDER under Woodcock had downplayed a warning flagged by Mosholder before when he warned in a Dec. 2003 report that antidepressants increased suicide rates in children, a report superiors sought to suppress.


Requests for comment from the DCNF sent to two nonprofits for which Woodcock serves on the board of directors did not receive a reply.

janetwoodcock.jpg

The Karen in her natural habitat, a sprawling bureacracy
where power is maximized and accountability is minimized.
This fine specimen of a Karen here demonstrates
her characteristic "smugging" behavior.
 
Too many people over use tylenol to control fevers. I seen it. The slightest fever and the mom over reacts and uses tylenol.
Do you think they'd do it if there was an appropriate warning on the label?
 
You think a pregnant woman would continue to take Acetaminophen if she knew it could cause damage to her unborn child? I don't.

And I don't know why you would. Think that, I mean. Rather cyncical of you. Every pregnant woman I've known has been very careful about what she puts in her body when she's preggo.

I guess we run in different circles
 
You think a pregnant woman would continue to take Acetaminophen if she knew it could cause damage to her unborn child? I don't.

And I don't know why you would. Think that, I mean. Rather cyncical of you. Every pregnant woman I've known has been very careful about what she puts in her body when she's preggo.

I guess we run in different circles
You asked about a warning on a label. You are naive thinking these woman stop to read labels.

You asked about a warning on a label, there is no room on labels for all the warnings. The warning will be in fine print not on the label but on the fold out with 100 other warnings.
 
Who else is as shocked as I am?
Shocked that you believe what the blob and this dope Kennedy say without giving it a second thought? I'm not shocked at all.

The allegations about autism have no basis in science.
 
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