25th Jan2012

Manipulation of Prescription Drug Research Data: Merely an Ethical Breach or a Fraudulent Claim?

by iSpit

Pharmaceutical companies are intimately involved in the modern research and development (R&D) world. They conduct clinical trials to satisfy the Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) regulatory requirements to file new drug applications (NDAs), prove the efficacy of new “uses” for existing products, and often design trials which compare the safety and effectiveness of their product to a competitor. These trials have the dual effect of advancing a body of evidence surrounding a particular therapy and serving as powerful advertising and marketing pieces. According to an insider article, “For a pharmaceutical company, getting research published in a peer-reviewed medical journal is like winning a stamp of approval from its most influential audience. It’s an automatic validation unmatched by any other medium.” 1 This research is used as a selling tool to validate claims made about prescription drugs, assuage worries about negative product effects, and at times, to provide proof that a product is superior to its competitor. At first blush, selling with peer-reviewed clinical trials seems to be the pharmaceutical industry’s way of presenting impartial scientific data about their products. However, when one looks behind the scenes as to how some of these trials are brought to fruition by the industry, it is prudent to question the ethics of this process and whether it is misleading to healthcare professionals (HCPs) and consumers.

The process of generating a string of clinical trials in the pharmaceutical industry has been referred to as “publication planning”. 2 This consists of a timeline of clinical trials studying the efficacy of a specific medical endpoint. This plan takes into account market dynamics, competitors, and other factors that may have an effect on a product throughout its post-NDA life cycle. It ostensibly predicts at what point in time the release of these publications will have the optimal promotional effect. Accounting for the above factors, a publication team determines not only publication timing, but also which authors will make the study most impressive and in what journal the article will be submitted. 3

In terms of authorship, many pharmaceutical companies employ in-house medical writers merely to refine articles and shorten time-to-publication while the principal investigator does most of the writing. In fact, some companies have drafted internal policies to reflect that this is the proper role of a medical writer. However, there is ample evidence that in many cases, internal pharmaceutical company publication teams, or external contract research organizations (CROs) are shaping every facet of the publication process – employing a process known as “ghostwriting. Throughout this article ghostwriting will refer to the process by which a pharmaceutical company or a CRO generates the methods by which data will be accumulated and analyzed; creates an outline for the manuscript; names a cherry-picked author to approve the final product; and pays that author to be listed on the journal submission. 4 Ghostwriting in the prescription drug arena is troublesome because it can conceal bias of the true author and in this context, where listed authors have contributed only marginally, if at all, to writing the manuscript, can constitute plagiarism. 5

An additional concern exists at the point of publication. It has been brought to light by several studies reviewing the medical literature that a significant proportion of safety and efficacy data generated and published in industry-sponsored clinical trials is biased in favor of that company’s product. 6 Furthermore, there is evidence that there has been considerable under-publication of unfavorable data by pharmaceutical companies with respect to specific products. 7 For example, it was recently reported that a German-based pharmaceutical company withheld from federal drug officials the results of a large clinical study indicating a widely used heart surgery drug increased the risks of death and stroke. 8 This is noteworthy because responsible treatment decisions founded on evidence-based medicine are only medically valuable when they rely on data that accurately presents the risk-benefit ratio for a particular product. Prescription by HCPs based on allegedly fraudulent data can pose a serious public health risk, as well as impose an unjust fiscal burden on federal healthcare programs such as Medicare.

To date there have been no legal sanctions against pharmaceutical companies for extreme forms of publication planning, including ghostwriting or underreporting of negative publication results. However, the scientific community has been clear about its position on these issues for some time and the industry has begun to follow. 9 In 2003, the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE), whose chief concern is to address ethical principles with relation to publication in biomedical journals, updated its non-binding uniform requirements for manuscripts submitted to biomedical journals. Applying the narrowest reading of the ICMJE guidelines, ghostwriters fall outside of their recommendations for ethical authorship. In virtually all cases, ghostwriters fail to meet ICMJE’s recommendation that authors make substantial contributions to conception and design of the trial. 10 It is evident that the industry is responsive to the ethical concerns surrounding ghostwriting as the Pharmaceutical Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) recently adopted the ICMJE’s guidelines as conditions for authorship as a suggested standard throughout the pharmaceutical industry. 11

While much of the scientific community, and now the pharmaceutical industry, has recognized that ghostwriting is outside the bounds of medical ethics, the question of whether this practice is fraudulent remains in a grey zone. With increased scrutiny by members of Congress and a political environment in which the government is emphasizing the importance of curbing fraud and abuse in the Medicare and Medicaid systems, it seems likely that an example could be made of a company involved in a ghostwriting scandal – particularly when it can be shown that a company not only hires ghostwriters, but has also keeps unfavorable scientific data from reaching the medical literature. 12

It is possible to get an idea about how the federal government is currently thinking about the issue of ghostwriting by noting Senator Charles Grassley’s recent inquiry into this practice. Senator Grassley has written several letters to several healthcare players, including a pharmaceutical company inquiring about ghostwriting. 13 It is interesting to note how the Senator frames his concerns. In each case, he characterizes ghostwritten studies as “subtle advertisements rather than publications of independent research”, and noted the significant impact this could have on physicians’ prescribing behavior, “which in turn affects the American taxpayer because the Medicare and Medicaid programs pay billions of dollars for prescription drugs.” 14 In short, the Senator seems to be following the federal dollars and subtly pointing out to parties benefiting from taxpayer funds that the practice of ghostwriting is unethical at best. Furthermore, Senator Grassley also uses language in his letter to a pharmaceutical company suggesting that taxpayer dollars should only be spent on those prescription drugs that are “safe and effective”. 15 This language tracks the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetics Act (FDCA) which mandates that each use of an approved prescription drug must be found to be safe and effective on the basis of adequate and well-controlled clinical trials. 16

Based on where this issue currently stands, attorneys may craft arguments alleging that these practices violate provisions of the False Claims Act (FCA). 17 Specifically, it may be argued that when a company submits a body of evidence skewed in its favor and reported in ghost-authored studies to the FDA for NDA-approval, the company is fraudulently and falsely inducing the FDA into believing that the risk-benefit calculus for its product is more favorable than the totality of the evidence demonstrates and is thus not safe and effective under the FDCA. Alternatively, under FDA’s exclusivity around “uses” regime, one could raise the argument that a company has been granted a new indication for its existing product based on fraudulent data as above. This can be construed as off-label promotion, which has been demonstrated to have severe FCA implications. 18 In both of the above scenarios, products determined to be unsafe and ineffective for any indication are ineligible for reimbursement under Medicare or Medicaid. Any federal dollars that have been spent on reimbursement for those products could be found to have been fraudulently induced under the FCA.

While there is ample room for pharmaceutical companies to defend themselves against these allegations, the current environment is one in which it is only a matter of time before research practices in the industry come under intense scrutiny – the adoption of new PhRMA guidelines suggests that this time has already come. Whether claims of fraudulent research practices will prevail under the FCA is unclear. What is also certain is the propensity for this type of publicity to have a significant negative impact on the image of pharmaceutical companies, as well as an undermining of the public’s trust in the integrity of the medical research system as a whole.

The new guidelines issued by PhRMA strengthening disclosure obligations for authors of medical manuscripts and adopting ICMJE guidelines for authorship is a step in the right direction. 19 While these guidelines have been criticized as doing no more than increasing the burden to disclose conflicts, they do recommend a thorough description of the study sponsor’s influence on study design, data collection and writing of the publication. 20 They do not go as far as banning third party authoring of manuscripts, but they do go a long way in increasing the transparency of the process. It is in the interest of corporate leaders to compare their research practices to the guidelines set forth by PhRMA and continue to question whether their research practices are developing an accurate body of evidence upon which to promote their products.


1Wendy Balter et al., The P’s and Q’s of Publication Planning, 23 Pharm. Exec. 130 (2000).
2Adriane Fugh-Berman & Susanna J. Dodgson, Ethical Considerations of Publication Planning in the Pharmaceutical Industry, 4 Open Med. 33, 33 (2008).
3Id.
4Sergio Sismondo, Ghost Management: How much of the Medical Literature is Shaped behind the Scenes by the Pharmaceutical Industry, 9 PLoS Med. 286, 286 (2007).
5Sheldon Krimsky, When Conflict-of-Interest is a Factor in Scientific Misconduct, 26 Med. & L. 447, 452 (2007).
6Sismondo, supra at note 4.
7Erick H. Turner, Selective Publication of Antidepressant Trials and Its Influence on Apparent Efficacy, 358 N. Eng. J. Med. 252, 252 (2008).
8Gardiner Harris, F.D.A. says Bayer failed to reveal drug risk study, N.Y. Times, Sept. 30, 2006.
9Natasha Singer & Duff Wilson, Medical Editors Push for Ghostwriting Crackdown, N.Y. Times, Sept. 18, 2009 at B1.
10International Committee of Medical Journal Editors, Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals: Writing and Editing for Biomedical Publication (2003), http://www.icmje.org/urm_full.pdf.
11Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, Principles on Conduct of Clinical Trials, Communication of Clinical Trial Results (2009), http://www.phrma.org/files/042009_Clinical%20Trial%20Principles_FINAL.pdf.
12John K. Inglehart, Finding Money for Health Care and Reform – Rooting Out Waste, Fraud, and Abuse, http://healthcarereform.nejm.org/?p=416#
13Letter from Senator Charles Grassley, Ranking Member, Senate Committee on Finance, to DesignWrite Inc. ( Dec. 12, 2008), http://finance.senate.gov/press/Gpress/2008/prg121208a.pdf.
14Letter from Senator Charles Grassley, Ranking Member, Senate Committee on Finance, to Wyeth Pharmaceuticals ( Dec. 12, 2008), 008/prg121208.pdf. (replies were received by Senator Grassley’s office responding to his inquiry surrounding their ghostwriting policies. In January 2009, Senator Grassley re-introduced S.301, Physician Payments Sunshine Act of 2009. The bill would amend Title XI of the Social Security Act to provide for transparency in the relationship between physicians and manufacturers of drugs, devices, biologicals, or medical supplies for which payment is made under Medicare, Medicaid, or SCHIP. This bill has been referred to the Senate Committee on Finance.
15Id.
16Federal, Food, Drug, and Cosmetics Act § 505(b)(1)(a), 21 U.S.C. § 355 (2000).
1731 U.S.C. § 3729(a) (2008).
18Press Release, Department of Justice, Justice Department Announces Largest Health Care Fraud Settlement in its History – Pfizer to Pay $2.3 Billion for Fraudulent Marketing ( Sept. 2, 2009), http://www.fbi.gov/pressrel/pressrel/pressrel09/justice_090209.htm.
19Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, supra at note 8.
20Id.
19th Sep2011

Hepatitis C: A Viral Time Bomb

by iSpit

It is a fitting message for the day—the reality is viral hepatitis does, in fact, affect everyone, everywhere.  Consider, for instance, that three percent of the world’s population is infected with the hepatitis C virus, a leading cause of liver disease. That’s 130 to 170 million people chronically infected globally. In the United States alone, as many as 3.9 million Americans are living with hepatitis C, and about half are unaware of their status.

Although hepatitis C is curable, most patients outside of the developed world are unable to access treatment.  In countries as diverse as Thailand, Indonesia, Georgia, Ukraine, Russia, India, and many parts of Africa, where hepatitis C is a major public health problem, access to diagnostics and treatment barely exists. This is particularly true for people living with HIV/AIDS, for which hepatitis C is now becoming one of the leading causes of death.

One of the critical drugs in the standard treatment regime for hepatitis C today—pegylated interferon-alfa— is under patent protection and costs as much as $50,000 per course. Because of a duopoly held by the pharmaceutical giants Roche and Merck—the two companies which currently produce pegylated interferon-alfa—there is no competition by generic manufacturers that could deliver desperately needed cheaper alternatives to hepatitis C treatment.  Two new hepatitis C treatments were recently approved by the FDA, yet they have to be used with pegylated interferon, adding another $30,000 to $50,000 to the cost of treatment. At these prices, how can a country like Ukraine, with more than 1 million people infected, really commit to treating its citizens?

Prohibitive pricing of lifesaving medicines is unethical and unacceptable. The only way to increase access to hepatitis C treatment is if pharmaceutical companies—in this case, Roche, Merck, and the firms with new hepatitis C drugs in the pipeline—commit to reducing their  prices substantially to levels that become affordable to the majority of people in need of treatment.  And because millions of people need access to these lifesaving treatments, national governments and international bodies, including the WHO, must provide the political push to make this happen.

More than a decade ago, HIV/AIDS patients marched the streets of South Africa, Thailand, and Brazil demanding affordable access to medicines that could save their lives.  And with success—in a matter of months the 00 per person per year to less than $100 today, resulting in more than 5 million people currently on treatment in low- and middle-income countries. Today, these same people are surviving on cheap generic AIDS drugs only to die from their untreated hepatitis C.

Demanding greater access to treatment is a primary reason that strong civil society groups, including people living with hepatitis C, initiated World Hepatitis Day. Roche and Merck must support people living with hepatitis C by substantially lowering the prices of pegylated interferon-alfa.

14th Sep2011

Relevant Classics: Nine Ether Hair (Video)

by iSpit


Download Video or MP3 -Iamnotarapperispit.com

Caron Wheeler – Livin In The Light

I know this is random… but I love beautiful women with natural hair…

Says video creator:

PERMS is ACID ON YOUR HEAD CHEMICALS GO INSIDE YOUR BRAIN. IT CAUSE CANCER THE FDA DONT WANT YOU TO KNOW KOREANS MAKE THIS CHEMICAL THEY DONT CARE ABOUT BLACK WOMEN

CHECK IT OUT YOURSELF WE ARE THE CHILDREN OF NATURE.START WEARING YOUR OWN HAIR AND STOP MAKING OTHERS RICH.

YOU ARE BEAUTIFUL WITH OUT ALL THAT CRAP BE YOURSELF LOVE YOU FOR WHAT GOD GAVE YOU

And who knows black womens hair better than…


Download Video or MP3 -Iamnotarapperispit.com

 

 

24th Jun2011

Radiation is Already Killing Babies

by iSpit

Newborn babies are the most vulnerable of all beings. Vulnerability says it all when it comes to a newborn infant. Children deserve the best medical treatment from the best form of medicine human intelligence can implement but what they get is governmental interference and neglect. Below we see the first information coming in that the radiation that the government is saying is safe and harmless and of very low concentration is already killing babies on the west coast of the United States where death rates are spiking.

Who cares about the babies that die? Our government certainly doesn’t! It is outrageous and tragic that our government and many of our doctors don’t care. Certainly we will never see medical officials caring about the deaths of infants caused by vaccines on a regular basis. The government’s identity has grown to such beastly proportions these days that everyone who is not “them” is an enemy, even the babies.

What do medical officials really care when a baby dies from vaccine complications? What do FDA officials do to block out the guilt and pain of knowing that they caused a lifetime of suffering for a young child when they allow dental mercury amalgam (toxic waste dumps) to be put right in their mouths? Do they care about peoples’ iodine deficiencies that leave them more vulnerable to the radioactive iodine from Fukushima? Do they care about the (more…)

09th Mar2011

Vaccines Activate Moron Genes That Cause Further Belief In Vaccines

by iSpit

New research accidentally conducted by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has discovered that vaccines activate the “moron” genes that normally lie dormant in human beings. Once activated, these “moron genes” cause individuals to lose higher brain function and the ability to question false information fed to them by doctors, drug companies and the media. This, in turn, results in even more people pursuing repeated vaccines, further causing expression of the moron genes, over and over again, until their brain function collapses to the level of a raw vegetable… otherwise known as a “voter.”

Because of their disastrous effects on higher brain function, these vaccines are now being called “Moron Vaccines.”

Moron Vaccines contain all the usual ingredients of flu vaccines and MMR vaccines, including methyl mercury, aluminum, formaldehyde and DNA fragments from diseased monkey organs. (This is truly what’s found in other vaccines…)

But Moron Vaccines have one ingredient that’s slightly different. As Dr. All Proffit, a leading vaccine patent holder, explained, “Moron Vaccines are much like regular vaccines, except instead of taking diseased material from infected cows and monkeys, we take brain cell samples from existing morons (more…)

21st Jan2011

Johnson & Johnson Faults Cleaning Procedures In Massive Recalls

by iSpit

Boxes of Tylenol cold medication are seen in a pharmacy in Toronto January 31, 2008. REUTERS/Mark Blinch

Johnson & Johnson faulted lax cleaning procedures and other problems at a manufacturing plant behind massive recalls of medicines like Tylenol, and said it was recalling nearly 50 million more bottles and packages of consumer medicines.

The healthcare company’s reputation has been tarnished by repeated recalls totaling nearly 200 million bottles in the last year and it could face criminal charges from the U.S. Department of Justice.

Johnson & Johnson is now recalling bottles and packages of various kinds of Tylenol, Benadryl, Rolaids and other consumer products, it said on Friday.

J&J said the new recall followed a review of records dating back to 2007 of products made by its McNeil consumer healthcare unit, which (more…)

02nd Jan2011

Lead-Leaching Dishes Killed Over 160 People in Africa

by iSpit

here has been an out break of lead-leaching plates killing people in recent time. The latest that happened is epidemic that had claimed over 160 lives in Africa. Read this true life story and have it in mind that those dishes you put your delicious foods on can harm you silently.

There has been a serious out break of lead-leaching plates in Northern part of Nigeria and some towns in Niger Republic.

It was gathered that over 160 people lost their lives in the epidemic. Report carried out by Food and Drug Administration in Nigeria showed that from January to October this year at least one person in every three families lost their lives by the silent-killing plates they put their foods on.

It was also learnt that if the spread is not checked other countries in the world might be affected by the pandemic.

WHAT SOME DISH MANUFACTURERS DO

It would be assumed that when those people bought their dishes from markets or stores they were very happy that they had bought something to put their foods on, but little did they know that manufacturers of those attractive, colorful and shinny-looking dishes had embedded lead-a toxic substance in the plates they bought.

Although it wasn’t the intention of the manufacturers to kill the innocent customers but without the addition of the lead in the dishes they wouldn’t have been attractive and presentable to the buyers. Without the lead, the aesthetic drawings and designs would not stick to the ceramic or metal plates.
(more…)

15th Nov2010

‘Four Loko’ Hospitalizes Students, Concern Raises Over Alcohol Energy Drink

by iSpit

Four Loko

Sugary, high-alcohol energy drinks that are popular with college students who want to get drunk quickly and cheaply came under renewed scrutiny Monday as investigators announced that nine freshmen had been hospitalized after drinking them at an off-campus party.

Several states are considering outlawing the drinks and at least two universities have banned them from campus while the Food and Drug Administration reviews their safety.

Washington state Attorney General Rob McKenna called for the drinks to be banned and sent a letter to the FDA on Monday, saying the drinks “present a serious threat to public health and safety.”

The issue received new attention after the Oct. 8 party in Roslyn, a picturesque mountain town known as the place where part of the 1990s television series “Northern Exposure” was filmed.

Police first responded to a report of an unconscious female in a grocery store parking lot and learned about the party from her friends. At the home, officers found a chaotic scene, with students from nearby Central Washington University passed out and so intoxicated that investigators thought they had overdosed on drugs.

(more…)

06th Nov2010

US Breast Cancer Drug Decision ‘Marks Start Of Death Panels’

by iSpit

America’s health watchdog is considering revoking its approval of the drug Avastin for use on women with advanced breast cancer, leading to accusations that it will mark the start of ‘death panel’ drug rationing.

A decision to rescind endorsement of the drug would reignite the highly charged debate over US health care reform and how much the state should spend on new and expensive treatments.

Avastin, the world’s best selling cancer drug, is primarily used to treat colon cancer and was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration in 2008 for use on women with breast cancer that has spread.

It costs $8,000 (£5,000) a month and is given to about 17,500 women in the US a year. The drug was initially approved after a study found that, by preventing blood flow to tumours, it extended the amount of time until the disease worsened by more than five months. However, two new studies have shown that the drug may not even extend life by an extra month.

The FDA advisory panel has now voted 12-1 to drop the endorsement for breast cancer treatment. The panel unusually cited “effectiveness” grounds for the decision. But it has been claimed that “cost effectiveness” was the real reason ahead of reforms in which the government will extend health insurance to the poorest.

(more…)

30th Sep2010

High-Fructose Corn Syrup Getting Rebranded as Corn Sugar

by iSpit

The good news: Consumption of high-fructose corn syrup is at a 20-year low.

The bad news: The folks who make this insidious sweetener aim to rebrand it to boost sales.

High-fructose corn syrup is cheaper than cane sugar and acts as a food preservative, too, so the food industry loves the stuff. But it’s been added to so many foods — yogurt, cereal, bread, drinks and even condiments — that researchers have fingered it as a culprit in the obesity epidemic.

The Corn Refiners Association has in the past marketed high-fructose corn syrup as natural. Our Bad Medicine columnist Christopher Wanjek argues otherwise:

“High-fructose corn syrup could be all-natural if cornstarch happened to fall into a vat of alpha-amylase, soak there for a while, then trickle into another vat of glucoamylase, get strained to remove the Aspergillus fungus likely growing on top, and then find its way into some industrial-grade D-xylose isomerase. This funny coincidence didn’t happen in nature until the 1970s in a lab somewhere in Japan.”

Now the Corn Refiners Association plans to ask the FDA to allow high-fructose corn syrup to be called simple “corn sugar” instead, AP reports. And already the group is advertising it with that name. The adds also claims there’s no difference between corn sugar and cane sugar. Hmm.

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