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Sat, 24 Sep 2005 21:10:16 -0400

[sSRI-Research] The Crawford Resignation Mystery

 

 

 

The Crawford Resignation MysteryALLIANCE FOR HUMAN RESEARCH PROTECTION

(AHRP)

Promoting Openness, Full Disclosure, and Accountability

www.ahrp.org

 

FYI

 

Merrill Goozner of Center for Science in the Public Interest provides

insight into what may lie behind the sudden resignation of FDA

Commissioner, Lester Crawford.

 

Goozner surggests, " One possible clue to the administration's thinking

comes from the appointment of Andrew von Eschenbach, head of the

National Cancer Institute, as acting commissioner. Von Eschenbach, who

previously ran the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center at the University of

Texas, has been touting the new generation of targeted cancer drugs

and in recent speeches has been confidently predicting that cancer

would become a manageable disease -- like AIDS -- by 2015. "

 

Former Congressman,James Greenwood, who is president of the

Biotechnology Industry Organization, which represents biotech

companies, described Dr. von Eschenbach as an " excellent choice " who

would provide strong leadership.

 

If Goozner is right, and Greenwood's endorsement of Von Eschenbachy

tends provide a confirmatory hint, then the FDA is being positioned to

provide rubber stamp approval for cancer drugs BEFORE they have even

been shown to be effective in clinical trials.

 

 

 

 

Contact: Vera Hassner Sharav

212-595-8974

veracare

 

http://www.gooznews.com/archives/000193.html

September 24, 2005

By Merrill Goozner

The Crawford Resignation Mystery

 

True to form, the administration picked late Friday afternoon to

announce that Food and Drug Administration commissioner Lester

Crawford resigned. The veterinarian in charge of the world's premier

food and drug safety agency, who was confirmed for the job just

two-and-a-half months ago, cited his age. He is 67.

 

The Saturday morning papers (the least read of the week; that's why

troubling announcements get released late Friday) gave no clues as to

what drove the decision, although both the New York Times and the

Washington Post hinted broadly that he was forced out. But why? It

couldn't have been the postponement -- again -- of approving Plan B,

the morning after contraceptive pill. Crawford was doing the

administration's bidding on that issue.

 

One possible clue to the administration's thinking comes from the

appointment of Andrew von Eschenbach, head of the National Cancer

Institute, as acting commissioner. Von Eschenbach, who previously ran

the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center at the University of Texas, has been

touting the new generation of targeted cancer drugs and in recent

speeches has been confidently predicting that cancer would become a

manageable disease -- like AIDS -- by 2015.

 

The Post story mentions that many oncologists have criticized von

Eschenbach for overpromising, but ignores the back story. His

prediction and embrace of the latest drugs has been prominently

featured by the conservative Manhattan Institute, whose work on FDA

and medical issues is conducted at its Center for Medical Progress.

The Center is funded by the drug industry.

 

In the world of journalism, the Wall Street Journal's editorial page

has been touting the new cancer therapies even when the clinical trial

evidence shows they don't work or help as few as 10 percent of

patients (and even then only for a few months). The Journal has been

on the warpath against Richard Pazdur, who runs the FDA's oncology

bureau, claiming he has slowed the pace of drug approvals.

 

Paul Goldberg's influential " Cancer Letter " pointed out in its August

issue how a right wing " insurgency " is pushing for early approvals of

cancer drugs. The insurgency includes Michael Milken (who has been

treated for prostate cancer) and an all-star cast of conservative

think tanks like the Manhattan Institute, the American Enterprise

Institute, the Cato Institute, the Competitive Enterprise Institute,

the Washington Legal Foundation and a cancer patient advocacy group

known as the Abigail Alliance.

 

Grabbing a page from the AIDS activists of the early 1990s, their

slogan is early access to experimental cancer drugs for the dying. If

they can get the FDA to approve early access based on experimental

data that suggests a new, experimental drug may affect the disease

(usually based on some surrogate marker like tumor shrinkage, which

can have no relationship to survival), they can then force insurance

companies, Medicare and Medicaid to pay for the treatments.

 

That would be a godsend to the drug industry, which has invested

billions in searching out cancer cures with marginal success. The new

targeted therapies can cost anywhere from $4,000 to $10,000 a month.

No wonder it has financially supported many of the conservative groups

in the coalition.

 

Pazdur, who also came to the FDA from the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center,

has fought to hold the line for the agency's traditional standard that

a drug be shown to be effective before getting approved. His staff has

also done a good job assessing whether a new drug's usually marginal

benefits outweigh the substantial side effects and risks that are

often associated with cancer therapies, including the newer targeted

therapies. Just yesterday Genentech announced it had to stop a trial

of its new drug Avastin for ovarian cancer after 11 percent of

patients began developing holes in their stomachs and intestines.

 

There is a serious discussion that needs to take place at the FDA

about how companies with new therapies can be encouraged to

collaborate to see if in combination these drugs can have a major

impact on cancer. But sophisticated scientific discussions and

breaking the entrenched habits of competitive drug firms is not what

the ideologues behind the anti-Pazdur campaign have in mind.

 

If von Eschenbach forces his former colleague out and appoint someone

more malleable to run the agency's oncology division, we'll know the

real reason why Crawford resigned.

 

Posted by gooznews at September 24, 2005 10:42 AM

 

 

 

THE NEW YORK TIMES

 

September 24, 2005 p. A-1

Leader of the F.D.A. Steps Down After a Short, Turbulent Tenure

By ROBERT PEAR and ANDREW POLLACK

 

WASHINGTON, Sept. 23 - Lester M. Crawford, the commissioner of food

and drugs, resigned abruptly on Friday, causing further upheaval at an

agency that has been in turmoil for more than a year.

 

Dr. Crawford, who was confirmed just two months ago, on July 18, after

serving as acting commissioner for more than a year, did not say why

he was stepping down.

 

Senior officials at the Food and Drug Administration said they were

stunned to learn of the resignation in an e-mail message from Dr.

Crawford, who also sent a letter to President Bush stating that he was

resigning " effective immediately. "

 

A government official said the resignation was related to the fact

that Dr. Crawford had not fully disclosed information about his

finances to the Senate before his confirmation. The official spoke on

condition of anonymity, citing Dr. Crawford's privacy.

 

Michael O. Leavitt, the secretary of health and human services,

accepted the resignation and thanked Dr. Crawford for his service.

 

Christina Pearson, a spokeswoman for Mr. Leavitt, refused to say

whether Bush administration officials had asked for the resignation.

 

" I can't comment, " Ms. Pearson said. " This is a personnel issue. "

 

In recent weeks, consumer advocates and scientists inside and outside

the agency had said scientific decisions were being warped by politics.

 

On Thursday, a commentary in The New England Journal of Medicine

titled " A Sad Day for Science at the F.D.A. " said that " recent actions

of the F.D.A. leadership have made a mockery of the process of

evaluating scientific evidence, " disillusioned many scientists,

" squandered the public trust and tarnished the agency's image. "

 

Mr. Bush said he intended to name Dr. Andrew C. von Eschenbach,

director of the National Cancer Institute, to be acting commissioner

of food and drugs.

 

Dr. Crawford, a veterinarian and expert on food safety, was named

deputy commissioner of the agency in early 2002 before his tenure as

acting commissioner. In that time the agency has been rocked by

disputes over many issues, including the safety of painkillers like

Vioxx, the regulation of heart defibrillators and other devices, and

delays in deciding whether to allow over-the-counter sales of an

emergency contraceptive. The director of the agency's Office of

Women's Health, Dr. Susan F. Wood, resigned three weeks ago to protest

delays in approving over-the-counter sales of the morning-after pill

Plan B.

 

Critics, including members of Congress from both parties, say the

agency has not provided the public with enough information about the

risks of drugs and devices.

 

" In recent years the F.D.A. has demonstrated a too-cozy relationship

with the pharmaceutical industry and an attitude of shielding rather

than disclosing information, " said Senator Charles E. Grassley,

Republican of Iowa and chairman of the Senate Finance Committee.

 

Senator Barbara A. Mikulski, Democrat of Maryland, said the agency had

been " politicized and degraded " under Dr. Crawford, whose leadership

she described as " tepid and passive. "

 

Before the Senate confirmed Dr. Crawford, a Senate committee looked

into accusations that he was having an affair with a woman who worked

in his office and that he had wasted government money by taking her on

official trips when she was not needed. An anonymous letter also

suggested that Dr. Crawford had helped the woman secure a promotion to

a higher-paying job.

 

An inquiry by the inspector general of the Department of Health and

Human Services found some contradictions in statements by Dr. Crawford

and the woman. Investigators found a close personal relationship

between them but no evidence of an extramarital affair.

 

The committee chairman, Senator Michael B. Enzi, Republican of

Wyoming, said at the time that the inspector general had found no

merit to the charges leveled at Dr. Crawford. No senator wanted to

pursue the issue then.

 

In his message to colleagues on Friday, Dr. Crawford said that after

three and a half years in top positions at the agency, " it is time, at

the age of 67, to step aside. "

 

Senator Richard J. Durbin, Democrat of Illinois, who voted against Dr.

Crawford's nomination, said Friday: " The Food and Drug Administration

is facing nothing short of a crisis in leadership. The controversy

surrounding Vioxx and other pharmaceuticals has exposed weak

oversight, conflict of interest and poor management at the F.D.A. "

 

Ira Loss, senior health analyst at Washington Analysis, which studies

federal issues for investors, said he had been told by someone in the

White House that Dr. Crawford had been asked to resign for a reason

not yet known to the public.

 

" Something new has arisen that has led to this, " Mr. Loss said. It was

not the controversy over the morning-after pill, he said, because Dr.

Crawford " did what they wanted on Plan B. "

 

Under Dr. Crawford, the agency was buffeted by fierce debates over

drug safety.

 

Critics, including many in Congress, said the agency had tried to

stifle one of its own scientists who had found evidence that the use

of antidepressants could cause children and teenagers to become more

suicidal.

 

The agency was also criticized as slow to recognize that Vioxx and

similar pain medicines could increase the risk of heart attacks and

strokes. Merck withdrew Vioxx from the market a year ago and is facing

thousands of lawsuits from people who say they were harmed by the drug.

 

Under pressure, Dr. Crawford and the agency have started to release

more information about potential safety problems of drugs and devices,

rather than waiting, as in the past, until they had a fuller picture.

 

" I think he started to lift the veil on how the F.D.A. does business,

which was long overdue, " said Peter Pitts, a former associate

commissioner under Dr. Crawford.

 

While many critics say drugs are approved too quickly, the F.D.A. has

also come under fire from pharmaceutical companies and some patient

advocates for not approving drugs quickly enough.

 

Pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies had generally welcomed Dr.

Crawford's appointment, partly because of his long experience at the

agency, but also because they wanted a full-time commissioner. Many

industry officials say that under an acting commissioner, the agency

tends to put off difficult decisions.

 

The agency has had a full-time commissioner for only about 18 months

out of the four and a half years that President Bush has been in office.

 

The president's first appointee, Dr. Mark B. McClellan, did not take

office until November 2002 and then left about 16 months later to run

the Medicare program.

 

It now appears that the agency will be without a permanent

commissioner for some time. Experience shows that it is difficult for

any nominee to obtain broad support in the Senate, because the agency

handles so many volatile issues.

 

Dr. von Eschenbach has been director of the National Cancer Institute,

part of the National Institutes of Health, since January 2002. Before

that, he had a long career as a doctor and executive at the M. D.

Anderson Cancer Center in Houston.

 

James C. Greenwood, president of the Biotechnology Industry

Organization, which represents biotech companies, described Dr. von

Eschenbach as an " excellent choice " who would provide strong leadership.

 

Mr. Greenwood had no comment on Dr. Crawford's resignation. Nor did

the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, which

represents big drug companies.

 

 

 

a.. Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company

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