Smoke, mirrors & the business of AIDS
WORLD AIDS DAY / What one drug company isn't telling you about its product & its advertising
Shaun Proulx / National / Friday, November 28, 2008
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VESTED INTEREST. Bristol-Myers Squibb takes credit for these One Life ads but what it doesn't mention is that its market capitalization is directly proportional to the number of people who take its HIV drugs for life.
By now you've seen those ubiquitous One Life ads. Beautifully photographed, for months they appeared everywhere from transit shelters in queer villages to full-page spreads in many Canadian queer publications, including this one.

One ad features two muscled hotties, tattooed arms coiled around one another in heavenly embrace. "Isn't it queer... to hide your emotions, to hide in the closet, to hide from your best friend, to hide your... to hide," reads the ad.

There is also a similar, less sexual version showing two handsome gents about to marry. "Do you Stephen... take Peter for better or worse through sickness and health, for richer, poorer, till death do you part?"

Both ads urge readers to visit Luvu2.ca. There, they are strongly encouraged to get tested for HIV. There's even a directory that will point them to the nearest clinic.

Luvu2.ca also includes a viral video encouraging everyone to get tested, set to musical heavyweights Mary J Blige and U2 singing U2's hit "One." To spread the message far and wide, the site promises rather vaguely that every time the video is shared, a dollar will be donated for "future AIDS-related programs."

This One Life campaign is courtesy of the folks at pharmaceutical giant Bristol-Meyers Squibb (BMS) and BMS doesn't hesitate to take credit for its perceived good deed: advocating that gay men and youth get tested for HIV, promoting being good to themselves, honouring themselves and taking care of one another. It's the cool thing to do, rockstar cool.

But what might not be so obvious to many is the One Life campaign's relation to another ubiquitous HIV/AIDS ad campaign that ran concurrently. It was the one featuring a cute guy with bangs and narrow eyes holding out a single pill. "1 with U," the copy reads. "Living with HIV is complicated enough. Your treatment doesn't have to be."

No one claimed credit in the 1 with U ad, but it too was from the people at BMS. It's a thinly veiled promotional ad for the company's one-a-day HIV pill, Atripla. The drug isn't mentioned in the ad because it's illegal under Canada's Food and Drugs Act to advertise prescription drugs direct-to-consumer.

Atripla is the result of a joint effort between BMS and the pharmaceutical company Gilead Sciences. It's a combination of the BMS drug Sustiva with Gilead's Emtriva and Viread. It's the concoction they've called Atripla and BMS is marketing the bejeezus out of it.

The 1 with U ads were often found conspicuously close to the aforementioned One Life ads. It was done with such noticeable frequency that you couldn't help but put the two messages side by side for a broader one: Get tested for HIV, it's what you do if you really love yourself. Should it happen you are HIV positive, know that we have a convenient one-a-day pill waiting for you. Ask your doctor.

The dual ad campaigns — and their regular side-by-side placement — raise several issues gay men need to know about.

"It's really nauseating," says Toronto doctor John Goodhew, who provides care for many HIV-positive patients. "The One Life ads are incredibly maudlin and emotionally manipulative. It takes an important message — get tested — and turns it into a marketing ploy."


ONE COMPANY. This ad doesn't make overt reference to Bristol-Myers Squibb or its one-a-day HIV drug Atripla. But BMS paid for the ads and ran them at the same times in the same issues as its One Life get-tested public service ads.

Tough side effects

What BMS does not reveal in its 1 with U campaign is that its 10-year-old drug, Sustiva, in the Atripla concoction, is a black sheep among HIV drugs, its bad rap for side effects well documented both officially and anecdotally.

The product monograph — that folded document that comes with the prescription — states that in Clinical Study 006, "52.7 percent of patients receiving Sustiva reported central nervous system symptoms" of varying severity including dizziness, insomnia, impaired concentration, somnolence, abnormal dreaming, euphoria, confusion, agitation, amnesia, hallucinations, stupor, abnormal thinking and depersonalization.

Ken Monteith, the former executive director of AIDS Community Care Montreal, now the head of the Quebec coalition of AIDS organizations, COCQ-Sida, took Sustiva for three and a half years.

"I used to be a guy who would go to bed and wake up and my hair wouldn't even be messy," he recalls. Then he started taking Sustiva, which he acknowledges did reduce his viral load to undetectable levels, but "I would wake up with all my bed sheets in a ball because I tossed and turned so much."

Like many people living with HIV, Monteith experienced depression, which he says Sustiva only made worse. Monteith finally stopped taking the drug in October, after going "four or five days where I really couldn't string words together without crying. That was the point at which I decided to change."

Brian Finch, who has been HIV positive for almost as long as the world has known about the disease, is no fan of Sustiva either. He has taken virtually every HIV drug there is and his tribulations with Sustiva are well documented in his darkly humorous blog, Acid-refluxweb.com.

"You can't discount what it's like to be suicidally depressed, to not be able to remember things to the point of not being able to work or take care of yourself," says Finch, adding that while he was on Sustiva he "wanted to jump off a cliff."

"I couldn't even write a simple, comprehensible email," he says. "These are no mere side effects."

A Google search reveals scores of Sustiva side-effect horror stories. On Poz.com, the website adjunct to the popular US print magazine for HIV-positive people, user Leatherpoz writes, "The panic, depression, night terrors, anxiety, as well as digestive problems were literally driving me crazy."

This past summer Finch went so far as to take a panel of researchers and doctors to task at the International AIDS Conference in Mexico City. Finch's comments made headlines when he declared that too much attention was being paid to Atripla's convenience and not enough to its side effects.

"I don't want HIV to be convenient," Finch told them. "I want to be treated with safe, effective drugs that don't make me want to hurl myself off my balcony."

As Goodhew notes, however, "Sustiva is still useful," saying he frequently prescribes it to patients. "But it has developed a reputation in the community because a lot of people who take it have a strong adverse reaction to it."

But the 1 with U ads avoid those details, playing up dosing simplification instead, which admittedly can help some people stick to their treatment regimes.

"There is a convenience element to the ad, but there is still also a concealment element," says Goodhew.

BMS wouldn't allow any of its employees to be interviewed for this article, except media spokesperson Marc Osborne.

"This one pill was an unbranded campaign," says Osborne. "The novelty is there is a daily one-pill available now."

Still, as Monteith points out on his AIDS Community Care Montreal blog, Accmpositiveoutlook.blogspot.com,"It would be naive to think that people can't figure out what drug is being advertised in the 1 with U ads.

"There is only one combination available in the format of one pill once per day, so this campaign is treading rather close to the line." On his blog Monteith calls the campaigns and the ad placement, "a violation of the spirit of the ban on direct-to-consumer advertising."

Not so new

The three drugs in Atripla have been on the market for some time. Health Canada approved Sustiva in 1999, Viread in 2004 and Emtriva in 2006. The combination of the three into Atripla was approved just last year.

Another pharmaceutical company, Tibotec, received approval in April for another HIV drug, Intelence. It's one of the drugs Finch takes.

Intelence is noted as the first new medication in more than a decade from the same class of HIV drugs as Sustiva. But the side effects associated with Intelence are far less severe.

When you're a company like BMS selling a drug like Sustiva and a competitor gets approval for something that does the same thing with fewer side effects, what else do you do but repackage and market your now-obsolete drug as something new?

Jose Sousa has been involved in HIV/AIDS activism since 1989 and sits on the board of the Canadian Treatment Action Council (CTAC) as its Quebec representative. He balks at the marketed newness of Atripla.

"It's being hailed like it's a new molecule," he says. "People don't realize it's three drugs already readily available."

"This is not to debate one's opinion on drug innovation," says Osborne, steadfast on message that the 1 with U campaign was to promote the one-pill option and not a rebranded Sustiva. "If you go back many years ago, there's a point where you needed to take many pills," he says.

But that was many years ago. "People with HIV these days can be on a regimen of two or three pills anyway," says Sousa. "One pill really isn't a big deal."

Certainly not for Monteith. After stopping Sustiva he switched to a multi-pill regimen to avoid side effects.

"It doesn't matter to me that I take one pill," he says. "I've been taking them for 11 years, I just gulp them back all at once."

Is awareness prevention?

Does BMS's advertising hocus pocus at least help to prevent the spread of HIV?

"From a prevention perspective the way this has been done doesn't make people, especially younger people, scared of HIV," says Sousa.

A point worth taking, considering that in Toronto HIV rates are on the rise among 15- to 24-year-olds — the very market targeted through the use of Blige and U2.

Goodhew, however, says he doesn't fault BMS, pointing out that it is in the business of making money.

"They are shareholder-driven," he says, blaming instead the Pharmaceutical Advertising Advisory Board (PAAB).

"The PAAB are the ones who police the no direct-to-consumer advertising.... Either a bureaucrat fell asleep at the switch by allowing these campaigns or they've lowered their standards and are beginning to open the door to direct-to-consumer advertising."

Osborne admits he can understand how people drew the link between the two campaigns.

He also insists the One Life ads were no more than the pharmaceutical company asking, "What could we do to talk to people about the need to get tested?"

Clearly, though, there is an argument to be made that coming from a company hawking an older, unpopular HIV/AIDS drug, the BMS advertising is transparently self-serving.

"It's not because you are running a campaign that you are necessarily going to sell drugs," Osborne counters. "It's about being careful and being tested so you know you carry the virus."

But if the ad urging readers to get tested runs right next to the ad for a one-a-day pill and the same company bought and paid for both ads but only identified itself in one, does that not seem remotely suspicious?

"It could have been done better," says Osborne. "We're going back to the ad agency."

Sousa isn't buying the BMS company line, especially because BMS has billions at stake and employs only the best marketing experts money can buy.

"Companies like BMS don't make mistakes like this," he says.

"We apologize and we would do it differently," Osborne assures. "We'll make sure in the future we can do better."

Some might say it's a little too late to do the right thing now, given that the campaign has come and gone and the messaging is now in the psyches of countless people who are now asking their doctors about Atripla.

"Now if someone comes in and wants to talk about the one-a-day ad it's more work because I have to address what Atripla is and isn't," explains Goodhew.

"I address the benefits of one-a-day, that it's not actually new and that it tends to have a significant side-effect profile. You have to undo the slick messaging. Decisions about treating HIV are complex and don't fit on billboards."
 



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Reader Comments


 
But gay guys *do* need to get tested
Your questions about BMS' motivations are valid, Shaun, and you've written a well-researched article. That said... www.hivstigma.com reports that 17% of gay men in Ontario are HIV-positive, but about 30% of them don’t know it. So for every 100 gay guys in Ontario, five have no idea they are HIV+. A study by American CDC researchers and published in AIDS, the Official Journal of the International AIDS Society, found that the proportion of new sexually-transmitted HIV infections resulting from individuals unaware of their positive status ranged from 54% (when they had the same number of vaginal and anal sex partners as the control group) to 70% (when they had twice as many vaginal and anal partners). Using the lower bounds, the transmission rate from the unaware group was 3.5 times that of the aware group after adjusting for population size differences between groups. The CDC researchers concluded that the HIV/AIDS epidemic can be lessened substantially by increasing the number of HIV-positive persons who are aware of their status. In the Ontario context, that means about 50-70% of new sexually-transmitted HIV infections result from just 30% of HIV+ individuals – those who do not know they are positive. If we focus on gay HIV transmission in Ontario, that means 50-70% of new gay HIV diagnoses are attributable to a mere 5% of all gay guys in the province. That's mind boggling. Imagine the difference in provincial transmission rates if that 5% of unaware gay guys got tested and knew their HIV+ status. The crisis truly worthy of our energy and efforts is finding innovative ways to get individuals engaged in high risk sexual activities to feel adequately safe and motivated to get tested routinely - hopefully in the first stage of infection when their viral loads are highest - so that they know their status. (From http://ickaprick.blogspot.com/2008/11/swiss-statement-redux.html)
Nicholas, Ottawa ON
11/28/08 6:23 PM EST
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atripla side effects
I read the article and don't think it is fair when you discussed atripla side effects, I went on meds last march 2008, the only drug i took and still taking is atripla, for the first week i had some of the mentioned above side effects but with taking some anti-depressants on the side , that helped. Currently I am off antidepressants and so far so good, side effects are minimal even none and the drug is working effectively, you didn't mention in the article that people react differently when taking sustiva, this is why every one should find a way to monitor himself,also before going on meds i think everyone should have a discussion with his doctor (personally I did), and was aware that atripla consists of 3 combinations, the only new thing about it that it is one pill a day, and for me that was very convenient. There is another drug which is one pill a day but it can affect the heart, that was never mentioned in the article.
tomy, toronto ont
11/28/08 8:47 PM EST
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Maybe, but...
This report provides some interesting food for thought, but really vamps up the drama to a point that it's hard to take seriously at times. Many HIV drugs -- like many drugs in general -- have (sometimes severe) side effect in (some) people, some of which are only temporary. The logical link and mercenary interest that this story imputes between the two ads is a bit cynical. The fact the "get tested" ads are nonbranded is not sneaky, it is (as you admittedly point out) because of Canadian regulations. As someone else pointed out, many people have no major problems with Sustiva. I have seen both ads. Now that you point it out I can see a bit of similarity to them. But I did not instantly get the connection to Atripla that is being described here as so obvious. In truth, I didn't think either campaign was particularly well executed, but saw no malice. The most interesting thing pointed out here is the notion that Atripla was formulated in order to repurpose Sustiva in the face of Intelence's emergence. That is something I'd like to hear more about, particularly I'd like to hear multiple diverse opinions on that question (ie, are there medical and community advocates who disagree with the assertion, as well as agree with it?). To me that's an important story about big pharma tactics. The focus on these ads is a diversion because the implied Machiavellianism is a bit of a stretch. If the story of Atripla's formulation bears any similarities to the issues with Abbott's Norvir (whose quintupling price increases were a cynical and greedy attempt to protect market share, that's something we all need to know about.
S., Toronto ON
11/29/08 10:17 AM EST
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Choice of treatment
I want to be clear by including some of the other comments from my interview that were not used in the article. The choice of a treatment for HIV is a very personal one that needs to take into account the individual being treated and her/his lifestyle. I may have decided that Sustiva was not for me in my circumstances, but it did control my virus for the entire time I took it and I have many friends who do not share the same side-effect experiences I described. I am grateful to live in a society where we have these choices and where thoswe who pay for my medications are willing to take into account my quality of life issues in determining what they will approve for payment.
Ken Monteith, Montreal Quebec
12/01/08 12:08 PM EST
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