On 8/29/24, AbbVie received a notice from FDA’s OPDP that their Serena Williams DTC television ad violated the FD&C Act. The reasons cited are for overstating the benefits of Ubrelvy. The untitled letter illustrates the difficulties pharmaceutical companies face in presenting benefit information that satisfies FDA requirements.
Ubrelvy tried to meet FDA requirements and do it in a :30 second ad. For drug ads, this is very hard to do given most drug ads need :60 and :90 seconds because of complex benefit claims and fair balance. AbbVie has used Serena Williams as a migraine relief spokesperson for several years. She has been an excellent example of a celebrity endorser. Serena has the migraine condition and the ads are presented in a unique creative style.
What happened in this case that OPDP called the ad violative? In sum, OPDP said the stated benefit of providing one dose rapid relief was not consistent with clinical data. That data showed only a minority of users got relief that quickly. The television ad claimed in a large super, “Ubrelvy Quickly Eliminates Migraine Pain”. Serena’s audio says, “One dose works fast to eliminate migraine pain.”
OPDP also had concerns that Serena, as a celebrity, further added to the potential for consumers to believe the one dose rapid relief claim was true for all users of Ubrelvy. OPDP cites several studies supporting the idea celebrities add to claim believability.
OPDP acknowledges that the ad had a small qualifying super saying “some people had pain freedom within 2 hours.” That small super was insufficient in balancing the ad’s stated claims of rapid relief. OPDP says the speed of relief and one dose claims are misleading because they do not work for everyone.
The Ubrelvy case is important because it illustrates the difficulty drug makers have distilling complicated clinical results into concise advertising claims. Ubrelvy and almost all other prescription drugs provide benefits for some but not all users. Trying to get to that one compelling benefit in DTC ads is difficult given that clinical data is mixed in patient outcomes. Drug claims need to have significant enough disclaimers on efficacy to clearly communicate the extent of the benefit.
In this case, OPDP felt Ubrelvy did not present the proven clinical benefits clearly enough. I should point out the Serena ad in question is not vastly different from the other Ubrelvy ads run from 2022. The earliest ads from 2020-2021 were less declarative, however, in the claim using the word “can” help relieve migraines.
I am not sure if OPDP questioned prior ads or had discussions with Ubrelvy during the pre-clearance process. There is a redacted paragraph in the letter that indicated previous OPDP concerns about Ubrelvy ads. This was when Allergan owned the brand before being acquired by AbbVie. Most drug ads are pre-cleared at least for the first campaign used. Sometimes new versions are not pre-cleared if similar enough to earlier ads.
AbbVie has been asked to stop running the ad and it will be interesting to see their response to OPDP. Usually if the pharmaceutical company stops running the ad, the FDA will not take further action requiring corrective advertising.