Guest guest Posted January 10, 2006 Report Share Posted January 10, 2006 Part II of WA Monthly report by Shannon Brownlee. Disheartened? Not furious? No, because DeAngelis could not know for certain whether or not the authors held back half the data in order to make their sponsor's drug look better " no matter how likely that explanation may seem. When researchers submit papers to a journal, the editor has little choice but to trust the authors have employed a ruthless skepticism when viewing their own results, that they have bent over backwards to minimize self-delusion. Editors and peer reviewers can ferret out sloppy reasoning, look at how an author has designed and executed a study, and correct faulty statistics, but as Angell remarked, " We don't put bamboo slivers under their nails. If they wanted to lie, they could lie. " Articles of faith Dr. Arnold Relman began worrying about this problem way back in 1977, when he became editor-in-chief of The New England Journal. That year, Relman got a call from a reporter about a paper that was due to appear in the next issue, discussing serious side effects--including lowering a man's testosterone and sperm counts--of a popular antacid. The reporter wanted to know what Relman intended to do about the fact that Wall Street analysts had acquired early copies of the paper and now the stock of the company that made the drug was falling. Relman, who began practicing medicine in the 1950s and calls himself a " relic, " says before that reporter's call, it had never occurred to him that medical research could have financial consequences for industry. But the more he thought about it, he told me recently, " The more I became convinced that the commercialization of medical practice and medical research, and the use of the information for commercial purposes, was a major threat to the integrity of the whole system. " He recognized that medical researchers, being only human, would have trouble applying that ruthless skepticism that was so necessary to good science when there was money at stake. The obvious solution to Relman and Angell, who was by then a deputy editor at The New England Journal of Medicine, was disclosure. Forcing authors to tell the world they were taking industry money, the editors reasoned, would prompt a little soul-searching among researchers who might otherwise be inclined to turn a blind eye to negative results or shade conclusions in favor of a corporate sponsor. It would put them on notice that readers would be watching. The editors also figured that disclosure would help readers judge the validity of an author's conclusions. " They could evaluate the data for themselves, " Relman told me recently. " But the discussion, the interpretation by the author can be slanted . . . it was still important for readers to know when articles were sponsored by industry. " JAMA, largely at Rennie's urging, followed suit soon after. Six years later, Relman upped the ante by barring researchers with conflicts of interest from writing editorials or review articles--like the one penned in Nature Neuroscience by Charles Nemeroff " because they carry great weight with doctors in private practice. Angell explains their decision like this: " Imagine a judge who has before him a case involving two companies suing each other--and he owns one of the companies. And he says, 'Not to worry. I'm a judge and I learned how to evaluate things in a dispassionate way.' He'd be laughed out of court. " She and Relman argued that just as judges must recuse themselves from cases in which they have financial ties to a litigant, editorialists and review authors with conflicts of interest should refrain from offering medical opinions. Angell was still defending that decision a decade later, as editor in chief at the Journal, when she wrote in 2000 that disclosure was not sufficient to preserve the integrity of the science that appeared in her journal's pages: " We believe that a policy of caveat emptor is not enough for readers who depend on the opinion of editorialists. " Why was it necessary to defend the Journal's policies? Partly because authors were ignoring them. In 1997, when Sheldon Krimsky, a professor of public policy at Tufts University, surveyed 61,134 articles in some 181 journals, he found that only 0.5 percent disclosed a conflict of interest related to the topic of the article, an impossibly low number given the fact that a quarter of biomedical researchers at the time were receiving funding from industry. The reason for this low rate of disclosure, as Krimsky notes dryly in his book, Science in the Private Interest, is that " author compliance is not especially high. " " Lots of eminent people took great offense at being accused of being influenced, " Relman told me recently. " 'What an insulting thing to say. I value my reputation; doctors and scientists know best. Trust us.' I spent the first 25 years of my career doing clinical research and being one of them, and I know the feeling. " As Harvey Lodish, professor of biology at MIT, huffed to Technology Review in 1984, when Relman first required disclosure at the Journal, " Scientists have all kinds of private consulting arrangements with biotechnology companies and many own stock in these companies, but that's nobody's business. It has nothing to do with the quality of their research. " " They actually believe that they aren't influenced, " says Angell. Aside from the fact that it's not in physicians' self-interest to acknowledge the effects of corporate money, they may have a hard time seeing the problem for the same reason fish don't know they're swimming in water: Doctors are surrounded by conflicts of interest almost from the moment they arrive at medical school. Pharmaceutical companies begin wooing young doctors with small tokens at first, pens and coffee mugs emblazoned with drug logos, then escalating to pizza night for medical residents, dinners at expensive restaurants and tickets to sporting events. Most schools offer a class in medical ethics, but there's no requirement that they discuss conflict of interest. Besides, a few lectures can't outweigh the message young doctors absorb every day, as they watch the icons in their profession--their professors, visiting lecturers, heads of departments--taking gifts, speaking on behalf of companies, flying first-class to medical meetings in Paris and Honolulu. By the time medical residents enter private practice or the lab, the gifts from industry no longer seem like gifts, but entitlements " just another way to be compensated for all those brutal, slogging years of lousy pay and long nights. A journalist friend of mine recently told me about the day his then-girlfriend, who was a neurosurgeon, received a check for several hundred dollars in the mail, along with a note from a drug company representative. It seemed his girlfriend had made favorable mention of a particular drug during a lecture she delivered a few days earlier, and the money was just a little thank you from the manufacturer. When my friend told her she could not in good conscience cash the check--that it was a conflict of interest--she looked at him, he said, as if he were speaking in some unintelligible language. This deafness to the power of money to corrupt medical science leads physicians and scientists to display an arrogance and a remarkable naïvete, both of which were very much in evidence in a snippy editorial entitled, " Avoid Financial 'Correctness,' " written in 1997 by the editors at Nature. They derided disclosure as a waste of time, writing, " This journal will persist in its stubborn belief that the research as we publish it is indeed research, not business. " The Nemeroff case has not changed the editors' view substantially, although they did alter their policy after it broke. Nature Publishing now requires editorial and review writers, along with the authors of original research papers, to inform readers whether or not they have conflicts of interest, or to say they decline to declare. Charles Jennings, executive editor of Nature, says they have no intention of following the New England Journal in barring editorialists who have conflicts. " I flatly disagree with that policy, " he told me. " That would exclude many of the leading experts. You don't want a policy that prevents Thomas Edison from writing about the future of electricity. Our position is for readers to decide for themselves about whether an author is biased. " Of course, most readers, especially practicing physicians, don't have the expertise or the resources to decide for themselves--to know how the studies might have been constructed differently, whether the conclusions have been shaded to favor the author's sponsor, or which data the author decided conveniently to leave out of the article. Knowing that an author might be biased doesn't aid in determining the extent and nature of the bias. It's not as though there will be two articles, one by a biased writer and one by an unbiased writer, published side by side to allow readers to identify the differences. Besides, conflicts of interest are now so pervasive, says Rennie, many readers scarcely take note, even when they're disclosed. Race for the cure? It's tempting to wonder what medical research would look like if universities and medical associations and editors of journals stopped talking about how to manage conflict of interest and started thinking about how to expunge it. Just say no. Proponents of Bayh-Dole will object, claiming the pace of medical advances will slow to a crawl, but bear with me for a moment and just imagine a different universe. Let's start with the medical schools " those temples of higher learning. They would be the first to cast out the drug merchants. Hospitals would pay their medical residents a decent wage so they can afford to buy their own beer and pizza. FDA advisory panelists who have a financial stake in the drug being considered would not be allowed to vote. And if the journals stopped publishing papers and editorials penned by academic clinicians with conflicts of interest, authors would be forced to choose between taking scientific credit and taking the money. Of course, that's not going to happen unless academic clinicians somehow decide there's something wrong with the status quo. In Sheldon Krimsky's view, the only way to deter conflict of interest is for academics to feel shame. Maybe so, but as a journalist who has spent a decade and a half peering at medicine from the outside, nose pressed to the glass, I'm struck more than anything by the apparent lack of shame among clinicians when it comes to this issue. Here's a little thought experiment. Imagine that a medical journalist " me, for instance " makes a tidy sum writing press releases for, say Pfizer, the manufacturer of Viagra. I don't make a fortune, maybe just enough to cover a year's tuition for my son's private high school. And let's say for the sake of argument I also buy a few dozen Pfizer shares. Then I turn around and write a story for The New York Times about several new drugs for treating erectile dysfunction. What would you think, dear reader, should my financial relationship with the pharmaceutical company that makes one of the drugs featured in my story come to light? Would you have reason to doubt its objectivity and accuracy? Of course you would. Not only that, I would be ashamed to show my face in any newsroom, and I would not be writing for the Times again. I'm not trying to claim that journalists are paragons of virtue, but we have no illusions about our ability to withstand temptation and avoid shading what we say when faced with a wad of cash. Not so in medical research. In that world, the author of a review article can have direct financial relationships with the manufacturers of drugs he is critiquing and still argue he has done nothing unsavory. What that suggests is a sense of fiduciary responsibility is not built into the professional code of medicine, a doctor's internal compass of right and wrong. And of course there are also pecuniary reasons not to acknowledge the power of money. The fact is, universities and doctors have become so dependent on industry largesse they can't even imagine disentangling themselves. Repeal the Bayh-Dole Act? Not on your life. Kick the drug representatives who wheel their little carts filled with sample packets of drugs out of your office? Who would pay for all those trips to medical meetings in exotic locales? Company line And so they try to manage it. About half of universities require that faculty disclose their conflicts of interest. A scant 19 percent set limits on the outside financial interests faculty may hold. Harvard University, long considered a paragon of scientific virtue, is now considering relaxing its rules governing industry collaborations. Now that Angell is gone, even the once-starchy New England Journal has loosened its restrictions on editorialists and review writers, who are now free to enjoy some corporate largesse, just not too much. " They think it's possible to be virtuous and rich at the same time, to take money from companies and then manage it, " says Angell. " They come up with rules that are so complicated in order to give the appearance of worrying about this, when what they are really worried about is the money might go away. " All their managing doesn't seem to be working, and we are the ones who will suffer the consequences. In March 2000, the FDA yanked a diabetes drug called Rezulin off the market after it had been linked to at least 90 cases of liver failure and 63 deaths. The withdrawal came three years after the agency had approved the drug to great fanfare. Articles in the popular media quoted diabetes experts who praised Rezulin, calling it " a truly novel approach, " and the manufacturer, Warner-Lambert, enjoyed a spectacular 144 percent rise in its stock price. By the fall of 1997, however, the FDA had already begun to receive reports of patients on Rezulin suffering liver failure, a side-effect that the agency's advisory panel glossed over during its deliberations. A paper published in the New England Journal also made scant reference to liver toxicity, saying the drug was " well tolerated, and most adverse events were considered to be related to the underlying diabetes. " Several clinicians with ties to the company subsequently urged the FDA not to withdraw the drug, even as the body count was rising. According to a Los Angeles Times investigation, at least 12 of 22 scientists who played a central role in the federally-funded study of Rezulin received research funding or other compensation from Warner Lambert, while four of the 12 voting members of the FDA advisory panel that approved Rezulin, and kept it on the market an extra 30 months, had financial ties to the company. When industry has penetrated every level of medicine from the lab bench to the FDA advisory panels, from the pages of the medical journals to your doctor's prescription pad, how are physicians to make decisions about treating their patients? How are they to know whether or not expensive calcium channel blockers are really better than over-the-counter diuretics for high blood pressure? (They're not.) Should you take a mildly depressed teenager to a psychotherapist, or put him on an antidepressant and risk sending him into a suicidal tailspin? Maybe a cholesterol-lowering statin drug will prevent this patient from suffering a heart attack, as the studies claim. Then again, maybe it will simply cause her muscles to break down and destroy her kidneys, one of the drug's side effects. And what about us patients? What are we to do with the knowledge that much of what passes as science in medicine is little more than gussied-up marketing? There isn't much we can do. And so, I say if you're ill, if you are ailing, or just sick at heart, go find a doctor who listens, who holds your hand. Just make sure you find a doctor who looks at evidence, not opinion, and when she pulls out the prescription pad, start asking a lot of questions. Shannon Brownlee is a fellow at the New America Foundation. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 11, 2006 Report Share Posted January 11, 2006 Thanks Marcia. It fits micely in the folder " medical scandals " that I had just created in the Health, General folder. Will read sometime at ease. Ien in the Kootenays ************************* " Never mind what the book says. God gave you a brain. " ~A.T. Still, founder of Osteopathy ************************** Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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