FDA scolds AbbVie over ‘misleading’ TV ad for a migraine pill featuring Serena Williams

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has scolded AbbVie for making false and misleading claims in a TV ad about a migraine pill that features Serena Williams, the third time this year the agency has taken a major pharmaceutical company to task for its marketing.

The agency is upset with Abbvie for a couple of reasons. First, the TV spot suggests that the medication, which is called Ubrelvy, will “provide a greater treatment benefit to patients suffering from migraine headache than has been demonstrated,” according to an Aug. 29 letter that was posted on Wednesday on the FDA website.

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Moreover, the regulator also chastised the company for using a “celebrity athlete,” which is problematic in this instance because the ad “amplifies the misleading representations and suggestions made and increases the potential for audiences to find the misleading promotional communication more believable due to the perceived credibility of the source.”

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