Guest guest Posted December 1, 2004 Report Share Posted December 1, 2004 >Posted 11/28/2004 11:41 PM >http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2004-11-28-fda-vioxx_x.htm > >Scientist says FDA called journal to block Vioxx article >By Rita Rubin, USA TODAY > >Just days before a medical journal was to publish a Food and Drug >Administration-sponsored study that raised concerns about the safety of >the arthritis drug Vioxx, an FDA official took the unusual step of >calling the editor to raise questions about the findings' scientific >integrity, suggests e-mail obtained by USA TODAY. > >Lead author David Graham says the call was part of an effort to block >publication of his research, an analysis of a database of 1.4 million >Kaiser Permanente members showing that those who took Vioxx were more >likely to suffer a heart attack or sudden cardiac death than those who >took Celebrex, Vioxx's rival. Graham had reported his study in August at >an epidemiology meeting in France, but publication in a medical journal >would have exposed it to a wider audience. > >Graham, associate director for science and medicine at the FDA's Office >of Drug Safety, says The Lancet, a medical journal published in London, >had planned to post the study on its Web site Nov. 17, a day in advance >of his appearance before the Senate Finance Committee to testify about >the FDA's handling of Vioxx. > >Merck had pulled the drug from the market Sept. 30 because of safety >concerns. Publication of the study could have embarrassed the FDA, which >was being criticized for not warning patients sooner of Vioxx's >cardiovascular risks. > >Steven Galson, acting director of the FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation >and Research, said Sunday that Graham's charges are unfounded. " We >didn't make any efforts to block publication in The Lancet, " he said. > " What we did is let The Lancet know that the paper was submitted in >violation of the agency's clearance process. " Graham had sought to >publish his study before getting the FDA's OK, Galson said. > >And in a written statement, FDA Acting Commissioner Lester Crawford said >that Galson contacted Lancet editor Richard Horton " out of respect for >the scientific review process. " > >Galson said he would like to see the paper published some day but didn't >see the value of timing its release to the Senate hearing, " not exactly >a scientific imperative. " > >Graham says he pulled his paper at the last minute because he feared for >his job. Following is a chronology of the events surrounding the paper's >withdrawal: > >• Nov. 12. Galson called Horton to tell him that the FDA had not cleared >Graham's paper for publication. He then e-mailed Horton a link to a >document describing the FDA's internal review process for journal >articles. " As you will see, there are some ambiguities here, " Galson >said in his e-mail. > >In a later e-mail to Horton that day, Galson brought up points from a >nine-page review of Graham's study by Ann Trontell, deputy director of >the FDA's drug safety office. Galson and Trontell noted discrepancies >between the article submitted to The Lancet and an abstract of the study >that had been submitted in May for presentation at a second scientific >meeting, an American College of Rheumatology conference. Trontell's >review, which Graham had forwarded to Horton, refers to " potential >charges of data manipulation. " > >Graham says he had already explained the discrepancies to his superiors >at the FDA. After the abstract was submitted to the rheumatology group, >Graham says, he discovered two problems: A computer program had >misclassified the amount of Vioxx some patients had taken; and one of >his co-authors noticed that an analysis Graham had done was incorrect. > >Graham says the rheumatology group told him that it was too late to >correct the printed abstract, but that he could present the corrected >analysis at its annual meeting in October, as he had at the epidemiology >meeting in August. > >• Nov. 14. In an e-mail to Galson, Horton wrote, " You will not be >surprised if I say that I was a little taken aback to get your call on >Friday (Nov. 12). " It is very unusual indeed for a member of the >employing institution of an author to contact us in the middle of the >review and publication process of a manuscript. " > >Horton wrote that Galson's call could be perceived as an improper >attempt to interfere with The Lancet's review process. Raising the >possibility that a scientist manipulated data " is an extremely serious >allegation, " Horton wrote. " One could read such an allegation as an >attempt to introduce doubt into our minds about the honesty of the >authors — doubt that might be sufficient to delay or stop publication of >research that was clearly of serious public interest. " > >• Nov. 18. Graham told a Senate panel that the FDA is " virtually >defenseless " against another " terrible tragedy and a profound regulatory >failure " like Vioxx. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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