This article is part of Big Pharma, Bad Medicine, a forum on the impact of the pharmaceutical industry on medical training and science, and the responsibilities of physicians.
In May of 2000, shortly before I stepped down as editor-in-chief of the New England Journal of Medicine, I wrote an editorial entitled, Is Academic Medicine for Sale? It was prompted by a clinical trial of an antidepressant called Serzone that was published in the same issue of the Journal.
The authors of that paper had so many financial ties to drug companies, including the maker of Serzone, that a full-disclosure statement would have been about as long as the article itself, so it could appear only on our Web site. The lead author, who was chairman of the department of psychiatry at Brown University (presumably a full-time job), was paid more than half a million dollars in drug-company consulting fees in just one year. Although that particular paper was the immediate reason for the editorial, I wouldnt have bothered to write it if it werent for the fact that the situation, while extreme, was hardly unique.
Among the many letters I received in response, two were especially pointed. One asked rhetorically, Is academic medicine for sale? These days, everything is for sale. The second went further: Is academic medicine for sale? No. The current owner is very happy with it. The author didnt feel he had to say who the current owner was.
The boundaries between academic medicinemedical schools, teaching hospitals, and their facultyand the pharmaceutical industry have been dissolving since the 1980s, and the important differences between their missions are becoming blurred. Medical research, education, and clinical practice have suffered as a result.
Academic medical centers are charged with educating the next generation of doctors, conducting scientifically important research, and taking care of the sickest and neediest patients. Thats what justifies their tax-exempt status. In contrast, drug companieslike other investor-owned businessesare charged with increasing the value of their shareholders stock. That is their fiduciary responsibility, and they would be remiss if they didnt uphold it. All their other activities are means to that end. The companies are supposed to develop profitable drugs, not necessarily important or innovative ones, and paradoxically enough, the most profitable drugs are the least innovative. Nor do drug companies aim to educate doctors, except as a means to the primary end of selling drugs. Drug companies dont have education budgets; they have marketing budgets from which their ostensibly educational activities are funded.
This profound difference in missions is often deliberately obscuredby drug companies because its good public relations to portray themselves as research and educational institutions, and by academics because it means they dont have to face up to whats really going on.
Industry and academia
No area of overlap between industry and academia is more important than clinical trials. Unlike basic medical research, which is funded mainly by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), most clinical trials are funded by the pharmaceutical industry. In fact, that is where most pharmaceutical research dollars go. Thats because the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) will not approve a drug for sale until it has been tested on human subjects. Pharmaceutical companies must show the FDA that a new drug is reasonably safe and effective, usually as compared with a placebo. That requires clinical trials, in which treatments are compared under rigorous conditions in a sample of the relevant population. The results of drug trials (there may be many) are submitted to the FDA, and if one or two are positivethat is, they show effectiveness without serious riskthe drug is usually approved, even if all the other trials are negative.
Since drug companies dont have direct access to human subjects, theyve traditionally contracted with academic researchers to conduct the trials on patients in teaching hospitals and clinics. That practice continues, but over the past couple of decades the terms and conditions have changed dramatically.
Until the mid-1980s, drug companies simply gave grants to medical centers for researchers to test their products, and then waited for the results and hoped their products looked good. Usually the research was investigator-initiated, that is, the question was something the academic researcher thought scientifically important. Sponsors had no part in designing or analyzing the studies, they did not claim to own the data, and they certainly did not write the papers or control publication. Grants were at arms length.
Thanks to the academys increasing dependence on industry, that distance is a thing of the past. The major drug companies are now hugely profitable, with net incomes consistently several times the median for Fortune 500 companies. In fact, they make more in profits than they spend on research and development (R&D), despite their rhetoric about high prices being necessary to cover their research costs. (They also spend twice as much on marketing and administration as they do on R&D.) The reasons for the astonishing profitability of these companies arent relevant here, but suffice it to say that as a result the industry has acquired enormous power and influence. In contrast, medical centers have fallen on difficult times (or so they believe), mainly because of shrinking reimbursements for their educational and clinical missions. To a remarkable extent, then, medical centers have become supplicants to the drug companies, deferring to them in ways that would have been unthinkable even twenty years ago.
Often, academic researchers are little more than hired hands who supply human subjects and collect data according to instructions from corporate paymasters. The sponsors keep the data, analyze it, write the papers, and decide whether and when and where to submit them for publication. In multi-center trials, researchers may not even be allowed to see all of the data, an obvious impediment to science and a perversion of standard practice.
While some new companiescalled contract research organizations (CROs)do clinical research for the drug manufacturers by organizing doctors in private practice to enroll their patients in clinical trials, the manufacturers typically prefer to work with academic medical centers. Doing so increases the chances of getting research published, and, more importantly, provides drug companies access to highly influential faculty physiciansreferred to by the industry as thought leaders or key opinion leaders. These are the people who write textbooks and medical-journal papers, issue practice guidelines (treatment recommendations), sit on FDA and other governmental advisory panels, head professional societies, and speak at the innumerable meetings and dinners that take place every day to teach clinicians about prescription drugs.
Medical centers increasingly act as though meeting industrys needs is a legitimate purpose of an academic institution.
In addition to grant support, academic researchers may now have a variety of other financial ties to the companies that sponsor their work. They serve as consultants to the same companies whose products they evaluate, join corporate advisory boards and speakers bureaus, enter into patent and royalty arrangements, agree to be the listed authors of articles ghostwritten by interested companies, promote drugs and devices at company-sponsored symposia, and allow themselves to be plied with expensive gifts and trips to luxurious settings. Many also have equity interest in sponsoring companies.
Much of the time, the institutional conflict-of-interest rules ostensibly designed to control these relationships are highly variable, permissive, and loosely enforced. At Harvard Medical School, for example, few conflicts of interest are flatly prohibited; they are only limited in various ways. Like Hollywood, academic medical centers run on a star system, and schools dont want to lose their stars, who are now accustomed to supplementing their incomes through deals with industry.
Schools, too, have deals with industry. Academic leaders, chairs, and even deans sit on boards of directors of drug companies. Many academic medical centers have set up special offices to offer companies quick soup-to-nuts service. Harvards Clinical Research Institute (HCRI), for example, originally advertised itself as led by people whose experience gives HCRI an intimate understanding of industrys needs, and knowledge of how best to meet themas though meeting industrys needs is a legitimate purpose of an academic institution.
Much of the rationalization for the pervasive research connections between industry and academia rests on the Bayh-Dole Act of 1980, which has acquired the status of holy writ in academia. Bayh-Dole permitsbut does not require, as many researchers claimuniversities to patent discoveries that stem from government-funded research and then license them exclusively to companies in return for royalties. (Similar legislation applies to work done at the NIH itself.) In this way, academia and industry are partners, both benefiting from public support.
Until Bayh-Dole, all government-funded discoveries were in the public domain. The original purpose of Bayh-Dole was to speed technology transfer from the discovery stage to practical use. It was followed by changes in patent law that loosened the criteria for granting patents. As a consequence, publicly funded discoveries of no immediate practical use can now be patented and handed off to start-up companies for early development. The start-up companies are often founded by the researchers and their institutions, and they usually either license their promising products to larger companies or are bought by large companies outright.
The result of Bayh-Dole was a sudden, huge increase in the number of patentsif not in their quality. And the most prestigious academic centers now have technology-transfer offices and are ringed by start-up companies. Most technology-transfer offices at academic medical centers dont make much money, but every now and then one strikes it rich. Columbia University, for example, received nearly $300 million in royalties from more than 30 biotech companies during the seventeen-year life of its patent on a method for synthesizing biological products. Patenting and licensing the fruits of academic research has the character of a lottery, and everyone wants to play.
A less-appreciated outcome of Bayh-Dole is that drug companies no longer have to do their own creative, early-stage research. They can, and increasingly do, rely on universities and start-up companies for that. In fact, the big drug companies now concentrate mainly on the late-stage development of drugs theyve licensed from other sources, as well as on producing variations of top-selling drugs already on the marketcalled me-too drugs. There is very little innovative research in the modern pharmaceutical industry, despite its claims to the contrary.
Over the past two or three decades, then, academia and industry have become deeply intertwined. Moreover, these links, though quite recent, are now largely accepted as inherent in medical research. So whats wrong with that? Isnt this just the sort of collaboration that leads to the development of important new medical treatments?
Medical research
Increasingly, industry is setting the research agenda in academic centers, and that agenda has more to do with industrys mission than with the mission of the academy. Researchers and their institutions are focusing too much on targeted, applied research, mainly drug development, and not enough on non-targeted, basic research into the causes, mechanisms, and prevention of disease.
Moreover, drug companies often contract with academic researchers to carry out studies for almost entirely commercial purposes. For example, they sponsor trials of drugs to supplant virtually identical ones that are going off patent. And academic institutions are increasingly focused on the Bayh-Dole lottery. A few years ago, the Dana Farber Cancer Institute sent Harvard faculty an invitation to a workshop called Forming Science-Based Companies. It began:
So you want to start a company? Join the Provost, Harvards Office for Technology and Trademark Licensing (OTTL), leading venture capitalists, lawyers and entrepreneurs for a conference on the basics of forming a start-up based on university technology.
Theres a high scientific opportunity cost in serving the aims of the pharmaceutical industry. For example, new antibiotics for treating infections by resistant organisms are an urgent medical need, but are not economically attractive to industry because they are not likely to generate much return on investment.
In addition to distorting the research agenda, there is overwhelming evidence that drug-company influence biases the research itself. Industry-supported research is far more likely to be favorable to the sponsors products than is NIH-supported research. There are many ways to bias studiesboth consciously and unconsciouslyand they are by no means always obvious. I saw a good number of them during my two decades as an editor of the New England Journal of Medicine. Often, when we rejected studies because of their biases, they turned up in other journals essentially unchanged. And looking back, I now realize that despite our best efforts, we sometimes published biased studies without knowing it. One problem is that we thought that if studies were subjected to rigorous peer review, it was sufficient to disclose authors commercial tiesessentially to tell readers caveat emptor, as in the Serzone study I mentioned earlier. I no longer believe thats enough.
The pharmaceutical industry devotes much, if not most, of its vast marketing budget to what it calls the education of doctors.
An important cause of bias is the suppression of negative results. But clinical trials are also biased through research protocols designed to yield favorable results for sponsors. There are many ways to do that. The sponsors drug may be compared with another drug administered at a dose so low that the sponsors drug looks more powerful. Or a drug thats likely to be used by older people will be tested in young people, so that side effects are less likely to emerge. The standard practice of comparing a new drug with a placebo, when the relevant question is how it compares with an existing drug, is also misleading. Supporters of the status quo claim that attempts to regulate conflicts of interest will slow medical advances, but the truth is that conflicts of interest distort medical research, and advances occur in spite of them, not because of them.
To be clear, Im not objecting to all research collaboration between academia and industryonly to terms and conditions that threaten the independence and impartiality essential to medical research. Research collaboration between academia and industry can be fruitful, but it doesnt need to involve payments to researchers beyond grant support. And that support, as I have argued, should be at arms length.
Expert advice
Conflicts of interest affect more than research. They also directly shape the way medicine is practiced, through their influence on practice guidelines issued by professional and governmental bodies and through their effects on FDA decisions.
Consider three examples Ive written about before: first, in a survey of 200 expert panels that issued practice guidelines, one third of the panel members acknowledged that they had some financial interest in the drugs they assessed. Second, in 2004, after the NIH National Cholesterol Education Program called for sharply lowering the acceptable levels of bad cholesterol, it was revealed that eight of nine members of the panel writing the recommendations had financial ties to the makers of cholesterol-lowering drugs. Third, of the 170 contributors to the most recent edition of the American Psychiatric Associations Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV), 95 had financial ties to drug companies, including all of the contributors to the sections on mood disorders and schizophrenia.
Perhaps most important, many members of the eighteen standing committees of experts that advise the FDA on drug approvals also have financial ties to the industry. After the painkiller Vioxx was removed from the market in 2005 (it increased the risk of heart attacks), the FDA convened a panel consisting of two of these committees to consider whether painkillers of the same class as Vioxx should also be removed from the market. Following three days of public hearings, the combined panel decided that, although these drugscalled COX-2 inhibitorsdid increase the risk of heart attacks, the benefits outweighed the risks. It therefore recommended that all three of the drugs, including Vioxx, be permitted to remain on the market, perhaps with strong warnings on the labels.
A week after the panels decision, however, The New York Times revealed that of the 32 panel members, ten had financial ties to the manufacturers, and that if their votes had been excluded, only one of the drugs would have been permitted to stay on the market. As a result of this embarrassing revelation, the FDA reversed the panel and left only one of the drugs, Celebrex, on the market, with a warning on the label.
Medical education
Conflicts of interest are equally troubling in medical education, where industry influence is perhaps greatest and least justified. The pharmaceutical industry devotes much, if not most, of its vast marketing budget to what it calls the education of doctors. The reason is obvious: doctors write the prescriptions, so they need to be won over.
Drug companies support educational programs even within our best medical schools and teaching hospitals, and are given virtually unfettered access to young doctors to ply them with gifts and meals and promote their wares. In most states doctors are required to take accredited education courses, called continuing medical education (CME), and drug companies contribute roughly half the support for this education, often indirectly through private investor-owned medical-education companies whose only clients are drug companies. CME is supposed to be free of drug-company influence, but incredibly these private educators have been accredited to provide CME by the American Medical Associations Accreditation Committee for Continuing Medical Educationa case of the fox not only guarding the chicken coop, but living inside it.
One of the most flagrant examples of the merging of education and marketing is Pri-Med, which is owned by M/C Communications, one of the largest of the medical-education companies. In partnership with Harvard Medical School, Pri-Med provides CME conferences throughout the country at virtually no cost to those who attend, courtesy of the huge income it receives from industry sponsors. The programs feature industry-prepared symposia during free meals, as well as academic talks by faculty during the rest of the day. The two types of talks are listed separately, but take place at the same meeting, where there is also a gigantic exhibit hall for industry sponsors. The Harvard name and logo figure prominently in Pri-Meds advertising and at the conferences, in return for which Harvard Medical School receives direct income, as well as payments to participating faculty.
If drug companies and medical educators were really providing education, doctors and academic institutions would pay them for their services. When you take piano lessons, you pay the teacher, not the other way around. But in this case, industry pays the academic institutions and faculty, and even the doctors who take the courses. The companies are simply buying access to medical school faculty and to doctors in training and practice.
This is marketing masquerading as education. It is self-evidently absurd to look to companies for critical, unbiased education about products they sell. Its like asking a brewery to teach you about alcoholism, or a Honda dealer for a recommendation about what car to buy. Doctors recognize this in other parts of their lives, but theyve convinced themselves that drug companies are different. That industry-sponsored education is a masquerade is underscored by the fact that some of the biggest Madison Avenue ad agencies, hired by drug companies to promote their products, also own their own medical-education companies. Its one-stop shopping for the industry.
But doctors do learn something from all the ostensible education theyre paid to receive. Doctors and their patients come to believe that for every ailment and discontent there is a drug, even when changes in lifestyle would be more effective. And they believe that the newest, most expensive brand-name drugs are superior to older drugs or generics, even though there is seldom any evidence to that effect because sponsors dont usually compare their drugs with older drugs at equivalent doses. In addition, doctors are encouraged to prescribe drugs for uses not approved by the FDA (known as off-label prescriptions).
While I favor research collaboration between industry and academia under certain terms and conditions, I believe the pharmaceutical industry has no legitimate role in graduate or post-graduate medical education. That should be the responsibility of the profession. In fact, responsibility for its own education is an essential part of the definition of a learned profession.
No excuses
Its easy to fault drug companies for much of what Ive described, and they certainly deserve a great deal of blame. Most of the big drug companies have paid huge fines to settle charges of illegal activities. Last year Pfizer pleaded guilty and agreed to pay $2.3 billion to settle criminal and civil charges of marketing drugs for off-label usesthe largest criminal fine in history. The fines, while enormous, are still dwarfed by the profits generated by these activities, and are therefore not much of a deterrent. Still, apologists might argue that, despite its legal transgressions, the pharmaceutical industry is merely trying to do its primary jobfurthering the interests of its investorsand sometimes it simply goes a little too far.
Doctors, medical schools, and professional organizations have no such excuse; the medical professions only fiduciary responsibility is to patients and the public.
Drugs licensed from academic institutions are supposed to be made available on reasonable terms to the public, but that legal requirement has been ignored.
What should be done about all of this? So many reforms would be necessary to restore integrity to medical research, education, and practice that they cant all be summarized here. Many would involve congressional legislation and changes in the FDA, including its drug-approval process. But the medical profession also needs to wean itself from industry money almost entirely.
For some time now, Ive been recommending these three essential reforms:
First, members of medical school faculties who conduct clinical trials should not accept any payments from drug companies except research support, and that support should have no strings attached. In particular, drug companies should have no control over the design, interpretation, and publication of research results. Medical schools and teaching hospitals should rigorously enforce this rule and should not themselves enter into deals with companies whose products are being studied by members of their faculty.
Second, doctors should not accept gifts from drug companies, even small ones, and they should pay for their own meetings and continuing education. Other professions pay their own way, and there is no reason for the medical profession to be different in this regard.
Finally, academic medical centers that patent discoveries should put them in the public domain or license them inexpensively and non-exclusively, as Stanford does with its patent on recombinant DNA technology based on the work of Stanley Cohen and Herbert Boyer. Bayh-Dole is now more a matter of seeking windfalls than of transferring technology. Some have argued that it actually impedes technology transfer by enabling the licensing of early discoveries, which encumbers downstream research. Though the legislation stipulates that drugs licensed from academic institutions be made available on reasonable terms to the public, that provision has been ignored by both industry and academia. I believe medical research was every bit as productive before Bayh-Dole as it is now, despite the lack of patents. Im reminded of Jonas Salks response when asked whether he had patented the polio vaccine. He seemed amazed at the very notion. The vaccine, he explained, belonged to everybody. Could you patent the sun? he asked.
Im aware that my proposals might seem radical. That is because we are now so drenched in market ideology that any resistance is considered quixotic. But academic medical centers are not supposed to be businesses. They now enjoy great public support, and they jeopardize that support by continuing along the current path.
And to those academic researchers who think the current path is just fine, I have this to say: no, it is not necessary to accept personal payments from drug companies to collaborate on research. There was plenty of innovative research before 1980at least as much as there is nowwhen academic researchers began to expect rewards from industry. And no, you are not entitled to anything you want just because youre very smart. Conflicts of interest in academic medicine have serious consequences, and it is time to stop making excuses for them.
This article is adapted from a talk delivered by Marcia Angell at Harvard Universitys Edmond J. Safra Foundation Center for Ethics on December 10, 2009.
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Marcia Angell, Senior Lecturer in Social Medicine at Harvard Medical School, is former Editor of the New England Journal of Medicine and author of The Truth About the Drug Companies.
Part of Big Pharma, Bad Medicine
Marcia Angell,
Address to the Safra Foundation (video)

Furthermore, shouldn't corporate sponsorship of any kind be eliminated in all facets of university education? Other areas of the academy are similarly devoted to unbiased production and dissemination of knowledge.
Lastly, why are we assuming that funding from private sources is inherently corrupting whereas government funding isn't? What makes us think that politicians and bureaucrats care any more about public well-being than do corporate bosses? Certainly not their actions. Blind faith?
1) The ratio of pharmaceutical company profit to research and development spending.
2) The practice of developing drugs for the sole purpose of replacing those with soon to expire patents.
Andy then asks: "Based on Angell's logic, Would pharmaceutical-company employees be barred from donating to their alma maters in large amounts?". Again, the answer is clearly supplied by the article itself. The answer is that they would not be so barred, so long as the donations meet the conditions for research support specified in the first proposal made by Angell.
Perhaps Andy should read the article again.
Angell pays lip service to the idea that there are conditions in which pharmaceutical companies and their agents can be involved. But we all know she wants them out entirely, believing their support to be inherently corrupting. How can she claim otherwise given her stark delineation of university vs. corporate mission? Protestations aside, the premises of her argument deny the possibility of productive collaboration. Industry will always do everything it can to make money, which, as Angell sees it, makes it unfit to participate in the advancement and provision of human welfare.
There's no need to get testy just because you disagree. I read the article. I'm not an idiot. Have some manners. The Internet is still real life. Basic practices of respectful discourse don't just end when you hit the power button.
Angell skeptics should take a look at what this means in only one area of what purports to be scientific medicine, psychiatry. She says:
"Third, of the 170 contributors to the most recent edition of the American Psychiatric Association’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV), 95 had financial ties to drug companies, including all of the contributors to the sections on mood disorders and schizophrenia."
Read Robert Whitaker's new book, Anatomy of an Epidemic, to understand the results of such alliances in terms of the dramatic rise of mental illness in America since the introduction of psychiatric drugs, particularly SSRIs, in the 80s.
What does it mean when children are dosed with stimulants, then, when many of them develop drug-induced psychotic symptoms, are dosed with additional drugs? For one thing, it means an astonishing rise in disabled young people on SSI and SSDI rolls, which are also swollen with far more adults suffering from chronic mental disorders than in pre-1950s, pre-wonder drug days.
Among other vital information, Whitaker discloses the fact that psychotropic drugs do nothing to correct chemical imbalances in the brain, which is nothing more than a marketing ploy that caught on. This is what happens when academic psychiatry collaborates with Big Pharma as part of its marketing team. Fortunately, Senator Grassley's committee may be putting an end to some of the more egregious cases of academic psychiatrist-marketers putting their own financial enrichment above the health of even the youngest members of this society.
http://societyforhumanisticpsychology.blogspot.com/
Here is subtext. Insurance companies, and their running dogs do not want to meet their contractual obligations to pay for brand name medications for dark skinned, poor people. So, Dr. Angell picks on harmless custom, exaggerates its effect, and provides no data showing harm.
Some questions.
I want to come over and to give cheap generic medications from 40 years ago to her dog. If she refuses, why would she want these given to the dark skinned patients of other doctors?
The current activities are very useful in promoting information exchange in all directions.
Did Dr. Angell watch the Superbowl, a very expensive production. Did she send a check for her fair share of the cost of this production? If the answer is, no, this hypocrite should retract this article. She benefits from advertising. Corporate support is advertising. Say, Bud Light gives me a horrible headache. I love their Superbowl commercials. Is there any bribe or inducement that will have me drink it and suffer horrible headaches? No.
In addition, NEJM is really in the pocket of the drug companies. That is incredibly hypocritical of her. It's a good journal, but seriously...
"Medical journal admits, apologizes for ethical lapses: Doctors wrote reviews of drugs despite ties to the manufacturers"
http://tmh.floonet.net/articles/ethicallapses.shtml
"NEJM's new editor cut ties with 20 drug companies before taking helm."
http://www.cmaj.ca/cgi/content/full/163/9/1182
"Advertising in Medical Journals: Should Current Practices Change?"
http://www.plosmedicine.org/article/info:doi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pmed.0030130
Some of these are more out there than others, but these are some of the validated claims that we've talked about. Don't get me wrong, I like NEJM. I just take what they say about drugs with a grain of salt.
Do you think these researchers got it wrong?
http://www.plosmedicine.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pmed.0050001
I'm sure the list could be expanded, but for now:
http://www.ahrp.org/cms/content/view/663/110/
http://www.ahrp.org/cms/content/view/670/81/
http://www.ahrp.org/cms/content/view/572/110/
http://www.ahrp.org/cms/content/view/656/9/
Andy, you asked if there is "solid evidence" of increased costs to patients." I can tell you of a personal cost in the form of the life of my son Dan Markingson while in a clinical study at the University of Minnesota while on Seroquel, an antipsychotic. In addition to Dan not being eligible for the study, the purpose of the study (CAFE) sponsored by the maker of Seroquel, AstraZeneca, was to (hopefully - didn't turn out that way) disprove the results of the CATIE Study which involved the same there drugs and in which Seroquel would come in a distant third. The study in question, the CAFE Study, had a general dropout rate of over 70 percent, the reasons for which we could debate elsewhere. But beyond that, why on earth are there still Phase IV studies being done on drugs approved over a dozen years ago! We know the answer to that; it is simply marketing, i.e. $$ And that hunger for money follows to academic institutions: the University of Minnesota was paid over $1400 for each 'enrollee' for each study visit in the CAFE Study.
Andy, psychiatry has been bought by the pharmaceutical industry. And as most people know, the results of clinical studies that are negative are 'buried.'
Thank God for people like Marcia Angell!
Mary Weiss
maryweiss36@hotmail.com
So, I've "been around the block" on many of the issues Dr. Angell discusses. I've witnessed the changes she describes and felt many of the same alarm bells going off. Some of my perspectives:
1. To me, the core problem we face is that our basic model of drug development has fundamentally shifted. What Dr. Angell does not discuss, but what I witnessed, is that during the mid 1990's the marketing departments of Pharma started running the drug discovery meetings that previously were run mostly by industry scientists. Decisions that used to be made in large part on pragmatic scientific merit and therapeutic potential were now determined by projections of "market share". I personally know of several very good ideas that were canned for that reason alone.
2. In the early 21st century, the drumbeat from the taxpayer public (that funds the NIH) increased about why their NIH was not producing translational output to treat their diseases that they suffered from. Prior to that time, medical schools and universities benchmarked their "success" on increases in NIH funding and NIH-funded faculty, who published more high-impact papers, that produced more NIH funding, etc. This closed circle fundamentally ignored the needs of society for real-world therapeutic discovery. But that was OK, and in fact worked in large part because Pharma was populated by scientists trained in these NIH-funded medical school labs and embraced that job of translational discovery. However, as they were increasingly ruled by market share, scientific merit and public need fell to the wayside.
3. Like it or not, in our current model of drug development, intellectual property (IP) needs to be protected early on or else one's most amazing discovery/treatment for disease will go nowhere. As long as we depend on a profit-based model for drug development, those are the rules of the road and it is naive to expect different behavior from university investigators. The Bayh-Dole act has been a godsend for moving discoveries from university labs out into the drug development world. That system is far from perfect, but it is a vast improvement over what existed before.
4. I think our society needs a radically new model for drug discovery and development, but I am not smart enough to know all the details of how it should work. As Dr. Angell discusses, no one should be surprised that investor-owned Pharma attempts to maximize its profits, particularly in our society where economic success so often defines individuals' personal value. Our collective challenge is to figure out how to stimulate novel discovery for the many tragic diseases that plague us, reward those fairly who take risk to make those discoveries happen, but preserve our personal and institutional integrities at each step.
In summary, I agree with Dr. Angell that Pharma has way too much influence over clinical drug research and medical education. But we can embrace that conclusion IF and only if we also agree that there are aspects of our society where the profit motive (as it is presently practiced) does not belong and can be corrosive to the public good. Changing the current system will be hard work. Bashing Pharma is easy- as the great sage Pogo said long ago- "We have met the enemy, and he is us".
So those who question whether the conflicts of interest yield increased cost—reasonable, given that there don't seem to be any comprehensive numbers, though any such numbers would undoubtedly be disputed by interested parties—might want to look at that. How many people are buying drugs that they don't need because researchers and industry collude in making them ill?
Medication of mental illness is probably the most talked about example of this, but just focus on high cholesterol if you're skeptical. Mental illness and its treatment via medication (or anything else) is a fraught philosophical, political, and ethical issue, made more complicated by the fact that there is no fundamental difference between mind-altering drugs developed by drug companies and those that governments ban (e.g., cannabis, alcohol, nicotine, heroin, cocaine, MDMA, etc.). People just love mind-altering drugs, and governments give pharma a monopoly on them because it pays dividends in campaign contributions. A drug needs legally recognized medical value or it will be banned, so researchers create diseases to fit the drug. (Note to reactionary people who can't read: I'm not saying you shouldn't take pills because you're depressed, anxious, whatever. I'm saying you should be able to take anything you want, including zanax or the plants in your backyard. You shouldn't need a diagnosis.)
But even if you put that to the side, there are lots of cases of more clear cut "physical" illnesses that get foisted on well people so that drug companies and their hired guns in academia can make money.
I think Angell is right to focus on failings of the medical profession. We can't expect pharma to change its tune, but doctors don't need to be complicit in the cacophony.
Ronald Regan deregulated medical insurance companies and medical centers in 1980 and it was a milestone event that initiated much of the economic mess we are witnessing today. Academics are under pressure to publish and pharmaceutical companies are under pressure to discover a new drug using antiquated technology. Investor monies are drying up and moving off-shore. Bill Gates isn't investing millions of his dollars in building universities in the USA, but rather elected to construct them in China. The USA is no longer at the top of the proverbial heap. We are a bankrupt nation with no GNP. There are numerous stakeholders and all are to blame. Everyone seems to be scrambling to find the magic solution, to become the hero and infuse the life-saving dose of economic antidote. CME and medical research publications are up for grabs. Managed care wants to run the entire communications show for many reasons, but basically to dictate to doctors which cheap generic they should be prescribing. Case in point: methadone for chronic pain. Generic medications are more profitable for CVS and other pharmacy chains to sell, they offer a much higher profit margin, with price points allocated by manged care or the government. It is worth the retail pharmacies efforts to "push" the use of generics. Does it matter if the quality of the generic is not equal to the brand name drug? Does it matter if the generic is not a safe option? I suggest that to some, such as the CEOs of managed care companies and retail pharmacies,it is of little consequence. They are most interested in the bottom line so they receive their BIG bonuses. People are an expendable commodity. Most of the research scientists and thought leaders I have encountered during the course of my career are legitimate. They want what is best and safest for the patient, but there are those rare exceptions. I am sick and tired of people holding up the rare example and referring to it as 'typical'.
There is no quick or easy solution to heal the economic woes of so many industries that were once the hallmark of our country's once-strong economy. It will be a long road to recovery, if recovery is even possible.
I suggest rather than act as arsonists by throwing more fuel on the fire, people begin to highlight and applaud the strengths of what is done well and penalize the rare abuser, rather than sending yet another viable industry to hell in a hand-basket.
Medical publications companies should focus on the quality of the articles they receive for publication. If the article can't get past peer-review, don't publish it. On another note, now that most publications are written in the UK, please have editors proof the abstracts. I have seen more errors in published abstracts (via PubMed) within the past two years than I have seen during the past 40 years. Bring publication planning and writing back to the experienced medical writers in the USA.
I'm a supporter of health care for all Americans as well as an anti-trust breakup of the pharmaceutical/insurance complex. Anytime you hear, "Studies have shown..." immediately ask yourself: Whose study? Who funded it? What are the financial implications of the FDA approving this drug?
Anyone who's ever witnessed a loved one sleepwalking on Ambien must agree with me. And that one's STILL on the market.
http://carl1anderson.wordpress.com/
Carl-
"I'm a supporter of health care for all Americans as well as an anti-trust breakup of the pharmaceutical/insurance complex."
You appear misguided. The insurance companies are part of the banking industry. It is the banking industry that wants to own medicine. The banking industry wants to run the entire show. The choreographed silent take-over has been in progress for decades, beginning with the establishment of Kaiser Permanente in California. The medical industry is a billion dollar business conglomerate and they want 100% of the profit-taking.
The pharmaceutical industry is scrambling for its life. Apparently the industry doesn't conform to the new world vision held by the few trillionaires who are calling the shots. There will be one, maybe two, major pharmaceutical (and/or biotech) companies when all of this is said and done. Probably none will be located in the USA, with the exception of the rare outpost. The banks insure the patients, insure the health care professionals, manage the care, dictate the drugs prescribed, the tests ordered, surgeries performed, the scale of care based on the financial status of the patient (column A or column B) etc., etc. Universal health care will be a reality, but not what you've imagined, nor at a low economic cost, but at a very high burden of high cost to everyone's health and to the working class.
As mentioned, there is no quick fix or no easy solution. We are all in for a bumpy road.
Just so people don't mistake you for someone trustworthy, you did admit in a deposition to distributing drugs outside the guidelines of normal medical practice, and that some patients had very adverse reactions. You also admitted to improper sexual interactions with your patients. Your only contention in court was that you were not a street dealer, and therefore should not be found guilty of malpractice. Needless to say, that didn't work.
You claim conspiracy, but in reality you were pushing and prescribing high doses of a well understood drug cocktail (fen-phen), known to be deadly. The State shut you down to protect the public interest, not save PHARMAs profits. Indeed, the drug company Wyeth suffered a multi-billion dollar lawsuit over the whole fiasco.
People interested in the story can find lots of documentation with a simple Google search.
links to my story are:
http://ccsvimammananny.blogspot.com/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lcHTdxa_hGQ,
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3qStYsd5tWI,
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zk3ydRbChDg ,
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j6LRZ0cavpw