Vioxx (rofecoxib) — Merck’s Heart-Attack Painkiller Pulled in 2004, $4.85 Billion Paid
Summary
When Merck & Co. pulled Vioxx from pharmacy shelves worldwide on 30 September 2004, chief executive Raymond Gilmartin framed it as a responsible company acting on new data; the documented record shows a five-year gap between that posture and what the company's own clinicians had measured. Vioxx (rofecoxib), a COX-2 selective anti-inflammatory approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration on 20 May 1999 and marketed as a gentler painkiller that spared the stomach, was instead associated with one of the largest drug-safety catastrophes in regulatory history. FDA drug-safety reviewer David Graham would testify to the Senate Finance Committee on 18 November 2004 that the drug had caused on the order of 88,000 to 139,000 excess heart attacks and strokes in the United States, of which perhaps 30 to 40 percent were fatal — a toll he compared to between two and four jumbo-jet crashes a week sustained over five years.
The gap between promise and reality was not discovered late; it was visible in Merck's own trials. The VIGOR study, published in The New England Journal of Medicine on 23 November 2000 under lead author Claire Bombardier, showed that the 8,076 patients taking rofecoxib had roughly four to five times the rate of myocardial infarction of patients taking the older drug naproxen — a relative risk the published paper reported as 0.2 in naproxen's favor. Merck attributed the difference to a supposed protective effect of naproxen rather than a cardiac hazard of Vioxx — a hypothesis that was never proven and that the company continued to advance while sales climbed past $2.5 billion a year and a sales force of more than 3,000 representatives carried the message to prescribers.
The withdrawal came only when the harm became impossible to explain away. The APPROVe trial — designed to test whether Vioxx prevented recurrent colon polyps, not to study the heart — was halted early on 23 September 2004 after showing that rofecoxib roughly doubled the risk of confirmed cardiovascular events after eighteen months of use, against placebo. The verdict here is therefore plain at the outset: an approved, heavily advertised, trusted medicine reached tens of millions of patients while the signal that would eventually condemn it sat in the company's data, the FDA's review files, and the medical literature, fully legible to anyone with access and the will to read it.
What followed was the largest pharmaceutical mass-tort reckoning of its era. In November 2007 Merck agreed to pay $4.85 billion to resolve roughly 27,000 lawsuits covering some 47,000 plaintiff groups, NEJM issued a formal "Expression of Concern" alleging the VIGOR authors had withheld cardiac data, and the case became the standard byword for how surrogate-endpoint approval, aggressive marketing, and suppressed safety signals can converge into mass harm before any regulator pulls the cord.
Timeline
The Stomach-Sparing Promise: How a Surrogate Benefit Built a Blockbuster
Vioxx was engineered to solve a real problem. Traditional non-steroidal anti-inflammatories such as ibuprofen and naproxen relieve pain by blocking both the COX-1 and COX-2 enzymes, and the COX-1 blockade erodes the protective lining of the stomach, causing tens of thousands of bleeding ulcers and thousands of related deaths a year in the United States alone. Rofecoxib selectively inhibited COX-2, the enzyme tied to inflammation and pain, while largely sparing COX-1. On that mechanism Merck built a clean marketing story: the same pain relief, fewer ulcers. The FDA's May 1999 approval rested largely on this gastrointestinal surrogate benefit — a measurable proxy for harm avoided — rather than on any demonstration that the drug was safe for the heart over years of chronic use. That distinction would prove decisive. The same COX-2 selectivity that spared the stomach also tilted the balance of prostaglandins that govern clotting: by suppressing prostacyclin, which keeps platelets from aggregating, while leaving thromboxane untouched, the drug plausibly made blood more prone to forming clots. The biology that made Vioxx gentle on the stomach was the same biology that threatened the cardiovascular system, and the approval pathway never required Merck to resolve that trade-off before mass exposure. Backed by a direct-to-consumer advertising budget that reached roughly $160 million in 2000 — more than was spent that year promoting Pepsi or Budweiser — and fronted in television spots by figures including Olympic skater Dorothy Hamill, Vioxx reached roughly 80 million prescriptions worldwide and became a multibillion-dollar franchise within a few years of its launch.
The Signal in the Data: VIGOR, the Naproxen Defense, and Five Lost Years
The warning did not arrive after withdrawal; it arrived in 2000, inside Merck's own outcomes trial. VIGOR, designed to prove the gastrointestinal advantage in patients with rheumatoid arthritis, instead showed that those on rofecoxib suffered myocardial infarctions at roughly four to five times the rate of those on naproxen — a difference that surfaced in absolute terms as a small but consistent excess of cardiac events. Merck's published explanation was not that Vioxx harmed the heart but that naproxen protected it — a 'cardioprotective naproxen' hypothesis for which no adequate randomized evidence existed and which independent cardiologists, including Eric Topol and Steven Nissen of the Cleveland Clinic in JAMA in August 2001, openly disputed, noting that naproxen's supposed aspirin-like effect had never been demonstrated in any outcome trial. Worse, NEJM editors later alleged that three additional heart attacks in the rofecoxib arm, known to at least two authors before publication, were absent from the printed paper, so that the published relative risk understated the hazard. The FDA's own response was incremental: a 17 September 2001 warning letter rebuking Merck for minimizing the findings, then an April 2002 label change that buried the cardiovascular data in the precautions section — but no withdrawal, no boxed warning strong enough to halt promotion, and continued direct-to-consumer advertising. For roughly five years the drug stayed on the market while the dispute played out as a scientific disagreement rather than a safety emergency, and tens of millions of additional prescriptions were written across that interval.
The Reckoning: APPROVe, the Senate, and the $4.85 Billion Verdict
Vioxx was undone by a trial that was not even looking for the harm. APPROVe asked whether rofecoxib could prevent recurrent colorectal adenomas; its external data safety monitoring board stopped the 2,586-patient study on 23 September 2004 because the drug roughly doubled confirmed cardiovascular events against placebo after eighteen months of use — placebo, not naproxen, eliminating the cardioprotection alibi at a stroke. Merck withdrew the drug worldwide a week later, on 30 September, wiping roughly $26 billion to $28 billion off its own market value in a single trading day. The reckoning then moved from the clinic to the Capitol and the courtroom. On 18 November 2004, FDA safety reviewer David Graham testified to the Senate Finance Committee that Vioxx had caused an estimated 88,000 to 139,000 excess heart attacks and strokes in the United States, with perhaps 30 to 40 percent fatal, and warned that the agency as structured was 'virtually incapable of protecting America' from a repeat — testimony he gave after describing internal pressure on his own Kaiser Permanente study estimating the harm. In December 2005 NEJM published its Expression of Concern over the VIGOR data. Litigation, fed by internal documents pried loose in discovery — including emails in which Merck staff discussed avoiding studies that might expose cardiac risk and a marketing campaign reportedly nicknamed 'Dodge Ball' to deflect physician questions — culminated in a 9 November 2007 agreement under which Merck paid $4.85 billion to resolve roughly 27,000 lawsuits, the largest drug-injury settlement of its time, while admitting no liability. The wonder-drug narrative was retired; the body count became the headline.
Contributing Factors
Aftermath
The material toll was vast and uneven. Merck's $4.85 billion fund, agreed in November 2007, resolved roughly 27,000 lawsuits covering some 47,000 plaintiff groups without an admission of liability, paying typical heart-attack and stroke claimants on the order of $100,000 to $200,000 before legal fees — a figure many critics judged small against fatal and disabling injuries numbering in the tens of thousands, and one the company funded against reserves it could absorb. The durable ripple reshaped drug regulation: the FDA Amendments Act of 2007 substantially expanded the agency's post-market authority, empowering it to require post-approval safety studies and Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategies (REMS) and to compel label changes — powers whose absence the Vioxx episode had exposed in plain view. The entire COX-2 class was forced into boxed cardiovascular warnings, Pfizer pulled the related valdecoxib (Bextra) in 2005, and the surviving member, celecoxib, carried restrictions and lingering suspicion for years until the large PRECISION trial in 2016 partly rehabilitated it. The NEJM Expression of Concern became a landmark in the debate over sponsor control of clinical-trial data, accelerating demands for mandatory trial registration on ClinicalTrials.gov and independent analysis of raw results. What remains is a name that functions as shorthand. 'Vioxx' is now invoked whenever a profitable, heavily promoted, regulator-blessed product is found to have carried a measured, suppressible harm for years before revocation — the canonical case of how an approved and trusted medicine can become a mass-casualty event while the warning sits, fully legible, inside the maker's own files.
Lessons
- Treat a surrogate-endpoint approval as a hypothesis, not a verdict: when a product is cleared on a proxy benefit, demand the hard outcome trial before scaling exposure — never after.
- When the maker of a thing also controls and frames its safety data, weight independent analysis above the sponsor's explanation; an unproven alternative hypothesis that happens to protect revenue deserves the heaviest scrutiny, not the benefit of the doubt.
- Read a label change as the floor of a response, not the ceiling: if a signal is strong enough to alter the warning, ask why it is not strong enough to halt the promotion, and count the patients exposed during every quarter of delay.
- Build the disclosure mechanism before you need it — mandatory data registration, independent monitoring, and real post-market authority — because if the only force that surfaces the truth is litigation, the harm is already done and merely awaiting a verdict.
- Audit the institution for structural conflict: when the body that approves a product also judges its safety in the field, expect reluctance to reverse course, and design independent review in from the start.
References
- Vioxx (rofecoxib) Questions and Answers U.S. Food and Drug Administration
- Cardiovascular Events Associated with Rofecoxib in a Colorectal Adenoma Chemoprevention Trial (APPROVe; Bresalier et al.), N Engl J Med 2005;352:1092-1102 New England Journal of Medicine
- Expression of Concern: Bombardier et al. (VIGOR), N Engl J Med 2005;353:2813-2814 New England Journal of Medicine
- Testimony of David J. Graham, MD, MPH (Nov. 18, 2004) Consumer Reports / U.S. Senate Finance Committee
- Risk of Cardiovascular Events Associated with Selective COX-2 Inhibitors (Mukherjee, Nissen, Topol), JAMA 2001;286:954-959 Journal of the American Medical Association
- Rofecoxib (Vioxx) Wikipedia