法国报纸Le Monde告诉其30万名读者在吃名为非那雄胺的药物时要小心

January 25, 2019

Dear Friends:

France is at it again. Doing the right thing, that is.

Earlier this week, Le Monde—the nation’s second-largest newspaper, with a daily circulation of more than 300,000 copies—ran a story headlined When Fighting Hair Loss, Watch out for Finasteride. (English translation here.)

The 1,170-word report, by Pascale Santi, begins:

“Romain Mathieu killed himself on June 7, 2016. He was 25 years old and suffering from depression. At just 19, while a student doing advanced college-prep work, he began taking Propecia… After Romain’s death, his mother, Sylviane Millon-­Mathieu, created an association called Aide aux Victimes du Finastéride (Helping Victims of Finasteride).”

The story, which quotes Sylviane as saying, “Sexual, psychological and physical side effects persist almost systematically when [finasteride] treatment is stopped,” later explains that AVFIN “is asking that the medication be pulled from the market.”

Quoted as well is Jean-­Luc Schmutz, head of the dermatology unit at the Regional University Hospital Center in Nancy, France, who’s also among our global team of volunteer medical professionals offering support to PFS patients.

“It must be prescribed with precautions and awareness of the reported adverse effects,” says Dr. Schmutz of finasteride, “warning patients and seeing them regularly.”

What’s more, the Le Monde story reveals that, in the next few weeks, France’s FDA-equivalent agency, ANSM, will send a letter to 100,000 health professionals reminding them of finasteride’s potential to cause depression, suicidal ideation and sexual dysfunction in some men.

Capping off the report is a quote from ANSM epidemiologist Caroline Semaille.

“Doctors and pharmacists must inform patients about medications, but the patients must take charge of their own health, looking not just at social media, but also reading the product inserts and searching public databases for information,” she says.

This of course isn’t the first time Dr. Semaille has issued public-awareness messages about finasteride.

In November 2017, she told Le Parisien: “ANSM has also looked closely at reports of adverse reactions to finasteride in France. There have been 40 such reports in nearly 20 years. And those numbers are not taken lightly. We know [these adverse drug reactions] are undervalued, because France does not have much pharmacovigilance reflex. And, worldwide, 508 serious psychiatric cases, including 25 suicides, have been identified.

“From now on, you’re informed. So you decide.”

Eight months later, France’s No. 1 news magazine, L’Obs, ran a feature story titled Finasteride, the Controversial Drug that Medical Authorities Continue to Defend (English translation here).

“Thirty-thousand men in France—and millions around the world—take [finasteride] every day,” the magazine noted.

“Health authorities are only formally linking it to issues of a sexual nature… What about the range of psychiatric, cognitive and physical side effects that victims call ‘post-finasteride syndrome’?”

If you or a loved one are suffering from PFS, and feeling depressed or unstable, please don’t hesitate to contact us as soon as possible via our Patient Support hotline: social@pfsfoundation.org

Thank you.