http://bmj.com/cgi/content/full/324/7339/0/f
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Following public scrutiny, the American Heart Association recently withdrew
statements that alteplase for strokes saves lives. The association
rated the thrombolytic agent as a class I (definitely recommended)
intervention for stroke despite controversy about its safety and
efficiency. Most of the association's stroke experts have ties to the
manufacturer of this drug and Genentech, the US manufacturer of
alteplase, contributed over $11m (£7.8m;
12.6m)
to the association in the decade before this recommendation. Lenzer
(p
723) cautions that seemingly impartial organisations that issue
professional guidelines may have ties to the manufacturers of
recommended interventions. In a commentary, Warlow (p
726) expresses fears that more is going to be added to the
bureaucratic sludge by insisting that guideline writers and any
sponsoring organisations declare just how much they have received
from whom to do what as this information should be available on
websites. In another commentary Saver and colleagues (p
727) insist that thrombolytic treatment in strokes works and that
the real scandal is that it is not used often or wisely enough.
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