AHRP is a national network of lay people and
professionals dedicated to advancing responsible and ethical medical
research practices, to ensure that the human rights, dignity and welfare of
human subjects are protected, and to minimize the risks associated with such
endeavors.
CONFLICTS OF INTEREST
Presented by Vera
Hassner Sharav
14th TRI-SERVICE
CLINICAL INVESTIGATION SYMPOSIUM
Sponsored By
THE U.S. ARMY MEDICAL DEPARTMENT
And
THE HENRY M. JACKSON FOUNDATION FOR
THE ADVANCMENT OF MILITARY MEDICINE
May 5-7, 2002
The cornerstone of public trust
in medical research is the integrity of academic institutions and the
expectation that universities, which rely on public funding, have a
responsibility to serve the public good. Financial conflicts of interest
affect millions of American peoplethose who are subjects of clinical
trials testing new drugs and those who are prescribed drugs after their
approval. Yet, the leadership paid little attention to the issue until a
stream of tragic and unseemly public revelations has shaken public trust
in academic research.
In January 2002, the Association
of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) approved a report by its task force
stating: "Financial conflicts of interest of clinical investigators...
[is] the single issue that [ ] poses the greatest threat to maintaining
public trust in biomedical research."
[1] The report did not address institutional conflicts of
interest which create a culture that collides with the humanist tradition.
Physicians reading the current
issue of JAMA[2]
will be startled to learn that a team of Harvard University professors are
advising physicians NOT to prescribe new drugs to their patients because
their safety has not been establisheddespite FDA approval. Adverse drug
reactions,[3]
they acknowledge, is the leading cause of death in the U.S. They analyzed
the 25-year record of drug label changes (between 1975 to 1999) as they
appeared in the Physician's Desk Reference and found that 548 new drugs
were approved during that period. Of these 20% required subsequent black
box warnings about life threatening drug reactions, half of these adverse
effects were detected within 2 years others took much longer. Sixteen
drugs had to be withdrawn from the market because they were lethal.
The JAMA report provides a basis
for evaluating the value and relevance of clinical trial findings for
clinical care. It also provides a basis for measuring FDA's performance as
gatekeeper in preventing hazardous drugs from reaching the market. They
found that clinical trials are underpowered to detect uncommon, but
potentially lethal drug reactions. Their design, biased selection, short
duration, and accelerated approval process almost ensures that severe
risks go undetected during clinical trials. The JAMA report validates the
findings of a Pulitzer Prize winning investigative report in the Los
Angeles Times by David Willman.[4]
Willman uncovered evidence
demonstrating the adverse consequences of the 1992 Prescription Drug User
Fee Act (PDUFA), the law that brought industry money and industry
influence to the FDA. The approval process for new drugs was accelerated
and the percentage of drugs approved by the FDA increased from 60%
approval at the beginning of the decade to 80% approval by the end of the
1990s. Willman reported that the FDA was the last to withdraw several
drugs that had been banned by European health agencies. There was a
concomitant precipitous rise in the approval of lethal drugs: between
Januray1993 and December 2000, seven deadly drugs were brought to market
only to be withdrawn after they had been linked to at least 1,002 deaths.[5]
In a follow up article, August 2001,
[6] Willman reported that the
list of lethal drugs withdrawn since Sept 1997 had jumped to a dozen9 had
been approved after 1993.
None of the drugs were for
life-threatening conditions, one was a diet pill, another for heartburn,
another an antibiotic that proved more dangerous than existing
antibiotics. The approval of these drugs illustrates the collision between
corporate interests and the public interest. Corporate interests revolve
around maximizing profits through the marketing of new, expensive drugs,
but corporate interests collide with public safety interests. FDA's
"expert advisory panels" demonstrate FDA's loss of independence. Most
advisory panel members have undisclosed financial ties to the manufacturer
whose drugs they recommend for FDA approval.4
Until 1980 a firewall existed
separating industry and academia to ensure that academic pursuits were
independent of commercial influence. When the Bayh-Dole Act of 1980
encouraged "technology transfer," that firewall was removed, allowing
federally funded universities to patent and license inventions developed
by faculty members. Researchers and institutions were free to enter into
ventures and partnerships with biotechnology and pharmaceutical companies,
and they did. It is estimated that of the $55 billion to $60 billion spent
by the biomedical industry on research and development, large companies
spend one fifth at universities, small companies spend one-half.[8]
With the flow of corporate money, came corporate influence and control.
The culture within academic institutions changed: business ethics swept
aside the moral framework within which academia had functioned. Gone were
such niceties as intellectual freedom and a free and open exchange of
ideas, so was full disclosure of research findings. Gone was the culture
of social responsibility, or a social conscience. Finally, the absence of
independent, third party review has put the integrity of the process and
the quality of the products in jeopardy.
The investigative series in the
Seattle Times[9] provides
insight into that changed culture at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center
during the mid 1980s. The copiously documented series examined the conduct
of research and patient care in two cancer trials. It illustrates how a
new entrepreneurial culture in medicine encouraged doctors to push the
limits beyond what can be considered, ethical research, by subjecting
patients to unjustifiable risks and increased suffering. At the Hutch a
physician with a conscience who clearly did not embrace the new
entrepreneurial ethos blew the whistle.
It has been said, "Doctors
fear drug companies like bookies fear the mob."[10]
Researchers whose findings
collide with corporate interests, are finding out that academic freedom is
no longer operational. Two high profile examples from our Canadian
neighbors illustrate that researchers can face intimidation by both
corporate sponsors and university administrators. In 1996 Dr. Nancy
Olivieri[11]
found that a generic drug for thalassemia, manufactured by Apotex, the
sponsor of the tirals, failed to sustain long-term efficacy. Dr. Olivieri
informed Apotex and the chair of the institution's research ethics board (REB)
and moved to inform patients in the clinical trials of the risk-; as is
her ethical obligation. Apotex terminated the two trials and warned
Olivieri of legal consequences if she informed patients or anyone else.
Apotex, meanwhile had reportedly contributed $13 million to The University
of Toronto.
When Olivieri attempted to
publish her findings, Apotex threatened to sue her for breach of
confidentiality. The University failed to defend Olivieri and the
principles of research ethics or academic freedom. The University
threatened to dismiss her, initiating a biased inquiry and knowingly
relied on false accusations by company- funded investigators - all of
which were later discredited by an independent investigation by the
Canadian Association of University Teachers.11
Olivieri's publication of her negative findings was delayed for two years.
The case is a dramatic illustration of conflicts of interest and the
collision between corporate interests and the right of research subjects
to be informed of any identified risks - as required by the principle of
informed consent.
Another example of the clash
between academic freedom and corporate interests, again involving
retribution by the University of Toronto, involves Dr. David Healy,[12]
a prominent psychopharmacologist and historian of psychiatry at the
University of Wales. Healy had been hired to head the Mood Disorder
Program at the University's Center for Addiction and Mental Health. The
program is reported to get 52% of its funding from corporate sources, and
the Center received $1.5 million from Eli Lilly. After Healy criticized
the drug industry in an article published by The Hastings Center, Eli
Lilly withdrew its $25,000 contribution to Hastings. When Healy delivered
a paper expressing his concern about the risk of suicide in some patients
taking antidepressant drugs - such as Prozac-- the University rescinded
his appointment. Academic freedom is but one casualty of corporate
influence.
As Marcia Angell correctly
observed [13] in her last
editorial in the NEJM, corporate influence in medicine is ubiquitous,
extending far beyond individual physician-researchers: its influence
determines what research is conducted, how it is done, and the way it is
reported. Short-term corporate goals take priority over society's
long-term needs. Under corporate influence, more research is done
comparing trivial differences between one drug and another, less research
is done to gain knowledge about the causes of disease.
The pharmaceutical industry
spends $15 billion[14] to buy
loyalty of health care providers and allied professionals-- educators,
investigators, and non-profit organizations. Drug companies shower
physicians with gifts, honoraria, global junkets, and provides fees for
patient referrals for clinical trials. They endow academic chairs and
programs, provides grants, stock equity, patent royalty fees to
researchers and institutions--even publication attribution is controlled
by sponsoring companies. They make contributions to professional
associations and patient advocacy groups, and sponsor their conferences.
The American Medical Association
sells the rights to its "physicians' master file" with its detailed
personal and professional information on every doctor practicing in the
United States, to dozens of pharmaceutical companies for $20 million.
[15] That database provides
drug marketers with invaluable information. Journals and the media profit
from drug advertising income. Such financial inducements assure industry a
fraternity of loyal allies, among them journal editors, who protect their
own interests and those of their corporate benefactors. For example, the
British journal, The Lancet, reported that the editor of the British
Journal of Psychiatry had published a favorable review of a drug while he
was receiving an annual fee of 2,000 (British pounds) from the drug's
manufacturer.[16] Although
clinical research is highly competitive, the interdependent collaborative
network of stakeholders tightly controls a self-administered opaque
oversight system.
The pharmaceutical industry also
buys political influence in Congress and the administration. Public
Citizen[17] reported that
there are 625 pharmaceutical industry paid lobbyists in Washington, one
for every congressman. Industry spent $262 million on political influence
in the 1999-2000 election. That's more than any other industry. This
influence ensures the industry profit enhancing legislation and reduced
regulation. Since the 1992 Drug User Fee Act (PDUFA) which precipitated
fast-track drug approval, congress passed the 1997 FDA Modernization Act
providing industry with huge financial incentives - a six- month patent
extension for drugs tested in children. These legislative initiatives are
a financial bonanza for the drug industry, translating into billions of
dollars in revenues - a six month patent extension can generate as much as
$900 million for a single drug.[18].
However, the accelerated pace in
research and in the drug approval process has had an enormous toll in
human casualties. Adverse drug reactions are the leading cause of death in
the United States - women and the elderly are at special risk.[19]
The LA Times revealed that between Sept. 1997 and Sept. 1998, nearly 20
million Americans took at least one of the harmful drugs the FDA had been
forced to withdraw.4 A comparison
of FDA's 25 year drug approval-withdrawal record analyzed by Lasser, et
al,2 in JAMA, and the LA Times
analysis of FDA's recent five year record raises alarms: 16 drugs
withdrawn within 25 years, 12 within five. Most of those withdrawn drugs
had been approved after 1993. The LA Times noted, "never before has the
FDA overseen the withdrawals of so many drugs in such a short time."
Since 1994, reports in the press
described ethical violations that undermined the safety of subjects in
clinical trials, causing some to die when they might have lived.[20]
The violations occurred because a culture of expediency had replaced a
culture of personal moral responsibility. Systemic ethical violations were
revealed at the nation's leading research centers[21]
- including, Duke, University of Pennsylvania, New York Cornell Medical
Center, Johns Hopkins, Fred Hutchinson, NIMH, University of Maryland, and
Harvard in China. The evidence demonstrates that the problem is not merely
a few rogue investigators-- the problem is an entrenched insular system
and weak federal oversight.[22]
The federal Office of Protection from Research Risks (now, OHRP) was
forced (temporarily) to shut down clinical trials at some of the nation's
most prestigious institutions.[23]
In September 2000, near the end
of her term as Secretary of HHS, Donna Shalala acknowledged in NEJM, "I
did not expect, or want, to complete my tenure . . . by raising questions
about the safety of patients in clinical research. However, recent
developments leave me little choice. . ."[24]
Unfortunately, the only initiative taken was to reorganize the federal
oversight agency (now OHRP) under a new director who believes that
education and a collaborative system of voluntary accreditation will
repair the damage.[25] I
disagree. Ethical violations such as failure to disclose risks and to
protect the welfare of patient-subjects are the result of conflicts of
interest - not poor education.
An example of complicity by
government officials who provide a shield of secrecy, while claiming
"transparency:" On February 7, 2002, the Alliance for Human Research
Protection[26] requested a
copy of current proposals that have been received by the Secretary of HHS
in accordance with Section 407 of federal regulations (45 CFR 46. Subpart
D). Subpart D protects children - who are incapable of exercising the
right to informed consent-- from experiments involving greater than
minimal risk if there is no potential benefit to them. However, section
407 provides an appeal process to the Secretary. The regulation stipulates
that nontherapeutic research with no potential direct benefit to the
child, may be permitted if the Secretary, after consultation with "a panel
of experts in pertinent disciplines·and following an opportunity for
public review and comment" finds "the research presents a reasonable
opportunity to further the understanding, prevention or alleviation of a
serious problem affecting the health or welfare of children."
Our request was denied with the
following statement:[27]
"Release of information would interfere with the agency's deliberative and
decision-making processes. Further, each researcher has a commercial and
privacy interest in the release of any information·." A similar reason was
given for denying disclosure of the list of experts: "Release of expert
identities associated with the review of individual protocols would
interfere with the agency's deliberative and decision-making process and
have a chilling effect on the ability of the agency to obtain frank and
candid opinions from its reviewers." This is an example of federal
officials attempting to block public access to information guaranteed
under federal regulation.
The role IRBs and
bioethicists have in this enterprise:
Ostensibly, IRBs were
established to serve as gatekeepers to protect human subjects. But lacking
independence, they actually function as facilitators for the accrual of
grant monies by their parent institutions. It is not surprising,
therefore, that IRBs have failed to protect research subjects from harmful
experiments or to weed out research that fails to meet scientific
justification. Specifically, what conclusion is one to draw from the fact
that 90% of the protocols approved by the IRB at the NIMH, apparently
failed to meet either ethical and / or scientific justification? Following
an investigative series in The Boston Globe,[28]
in 1998, the director of NIMH ordered an independent evaluation of all 89
clinical trials at the Institute. The result: 29 were suspended at once,
and an additional 50 protocols were put on probation for lack of
scientific justification - that's 79 out of 89.[29]
In "Pharma Buys a Conscience,"
Dr. Carl Elliott, [30]
director of the Bioethics Center, Minnesota, (who happens to be a
physician) is an insightful critical examination of bioethics. Elliott
criticizes his colleagues who have been seduced by corporate financial
incentives. He points out how conflicts of interest have undermined the
professional integrity of bioethics. He lists ethics consultants and their
corporate benefactors,[31] as
well as what he calls, "corporate-academic dating services" that match
academic "experts" with businesses seeking expertise. He notes that
corporate money and corporate influence is so entrenched at university
medical centers that overt threats need not be explicitly made, everyone
knows what's expected. Bioethicists are in demand because they lend the
appearance of legitimacy to corporate ventures. Therefore, corporations
funnel money to bioethics centers, and pay bioethicists retainers to serve
on their advisory boards. But, as Elliott points out, "The problem with
ethics consultants is that they look like watchdogs but can be used like
show dogs."
Indeed, bioethicists have lent
the seal of legitimacy to highly questionable, if not outright unethical
research. Their corporate affiliations are not publicly disclosed when
they render opinions in the media or on IRBs, or on government advisory
panels. An institutionalized veil of secrecy shields academics who sit on
government appointed advisory panels. While their recommendations affect
public policy, those recommendations may also serve the financial
interests of the corporations that pay them.
In 1997, I testified before the
National Bioethics Advisory Commission (NBAC) about financial conflicts of
interest, betrayal of trust, and the undue influence of drug companies in
medicine. I pointed out that physicians who accept large payments to refer
patients for clinical trials testing the safety and efficacy of new
products are breaching medical ethics. The Wall Street Journal, for
example, reported that doctors with academic affiliations have been paid
as much as $30,000 per patient per drug trial[32]
in schizophrenia and Alzheimer's studies.
Following the testimonies, Dr.
Harold Shapiro, chair of the NBAC and President of Princeton, indicated
that the NBAC would not focus on financial arrangements of research
investigators because, "after all, this is a capitalist country." Dr.
Shapiro neglected to mention that he was drawing a salary from Dow
Chemical Company, on whose advisory board he sat.30
Such publicly undisclosed personal financial arrangements by academics who
sit on public policy advisory boards are not at all unusual. The public is
under the illusion that so-called "expert advisory panels" are
independent, and render objective, disinterested recommendations. The
public does not suspect that these panelists from academia have financial
ties to biochemical companies, and therefore, conflicts of interest. No
one is held accountable for formulating public policy recommendations that
serve an undisclosed self-interest.
What chance does a vulnerable
individual patient have as an outsider confronting a fraternity of
insiders - all of whom have something to gain from his participation as a
subject? The system serves its stakeholders. Revelations about the
system's failure to protect human subjects from preventable harm have come
to light, not because of any internal safety mechanisms, but as a result
of information provided by conscientious whistle blowers and investigative
press reports.
Following are my "dirty dozen"
corrupt research review practices that undermine both the safety of human
subjects and the integrity of research findings:
Interpretation of findings--"efficacy in
expert hands is not the same as clinical effectiveness"33
Biased advisory panels: FDA panels
recommend drugs that kill.
Bioethics ethics: conscience for
hire;
Professional guidelines,
recommendations.
Corrupted published data: suppression of
negative findings; ghost authorship.
11. Complicit government
oversight officials fail to enforce, preferring to redefine the standards:
Who is a human subject? What's a condition? Can children's assent be
called consent?
12. Using patients as laboratory
animals in symptom provocation, relapse inducing experiments.
Case 1: Placebo design:
ethics vs financial stakes
Corporate influence begins with
the protocol design and subject selection. For example, unequal dosage
comparisons will elicit different side effects that may skew the results.
Selective inclusion criteria can effectively hide adverse side effects
that will later be reveled in clinical practice. Drug "washout' followed
by placebo allows sponsors to manipulate the condition under which a new
drug is tested. Specifically, by making patients very sick during washout,
the efficacy of the new drug is likely to be inflated. Such manipulations
may explain the reason that a drug's efficacy in clinical trials is not
usually matched under normal clinical conditions.
The use of placebo control
trials in patients for whose condition an effective treatment exists has
been the subject of heated debate. The FDA has been severely criticized
for its placebo control policy because it undermines patient's best
interest in violation of the Declaration of Helsinki. Of particular
concern is the risk of suicide in severely depressed or psychotic patients
who are at increased risk when their condition is destabilized by drug
"washout" and placebo. They are at risk whether the drugs are an effective
treatment or not because psychotropic drugs are associated with severe
withdrawal symptoms.
Carl Elliott described his
battle with the university's IRB when he challenged placebo control
trials: "Tables were pounded. Faces turned scarlet. Blood pressures
soared. Yet the IRB continued to approve many of the trials, over my
objections and those of other members of the committee. The hospital
administration eventually dissolved the IRB and reconstituted it with new
membership."26 Elliott explains
that the reason for the explosive reaction was that "everyone's interests
were involved" önot just the sponsoring drug company. These trials
generated huge income for the hospital and investigators alike, some
earning between $500,000 and $1 million a year.
Case 2: Biased Clinical Guidelines:
An investigative report by
Jeanne Lenzer[33]
in the British Medical Journal (March 2002) sheds light on the underlying
factors that led the American Heart Association to "definitely recommend"
a treatment that could cost more lives than the disease itself. In August
2000 the Heart Association promoted alteplase (tPA), manufactured by
Genetech, as a treatment for "brain attack." The Association upgraded its
recommendation of tPA for stroke, placing it in the class I category. It
did so despite the fact that most controlled trials showed that such
thrombolytics increase mortality rates in acute ischaemic stroke.
In it's annual report it described tPA as follows: "A clot-busting drug
that helped revolutionize heart attack treatment, tPA holds enormous
potential for the treatment of ischemic stroke, which accounts for 70 to
80 percent of all strokes. It is estimated that tPA could be used in
400,000 stroke case per year to save lives, reduce disability and reverse
paralysis."33
The Heart Association made its
bold recommendation on the basis of a single controlled clinical trial
conducted by the National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Stroke (NINDS).
Six other randomized studies reached the opposite conclusion. Lenzer
reported the following: the NINDS study design ensured a favorable finding
for tPA because the patients selected to get tPA had mild stroke scores at
baseline compared with patients selected for the placebo arm who had worse
strokes. Furthermore, only one fifth of those initially diagnosed were
found to have stroke. This, of course put those non-stroke patients at
increased risk of harm with no potential benefit. There were two
observational studies reaching opposite conclusions. The Cleveland
study found that twice as many patients given tPA died compared with those
that did not.
Most suspicious of all, however,
is the refusal by NINDS to reveal the raw data for that single trial.
Lenzer's request under the Freedom of Information Act was rejected.
Furthermore, the company vigorously opposes a head to head study comparing
alteplase to streptokinase for myocardial infarction. Dr. Elliott
Grossbard, a Genetch scientist, provided the company's position: "We don't
know how another trial would turn out·[another study] may be good for
America, but it wasn't going to be a good thing for us."[34]
The panel of experts who wrote
the Heart Association's Clinical Practice Guideline recommending tPA
failed to mention the catastrophic results from the Cleveland study.
According to the BMJ article, eight of the nine expert panel members had
financial ties to the manufacturer, Genetech. Dr. Jerome Hoffman, the
single panel member who did not have ties to Genetech wrote a dissenting
opinion that was not even acknowledged by the panel. Hoffman questioned
the tPA endorsement in a BMJ article, charging that the NINDS findings
were artificially manipulated to exclude 95% of stroke patients.[35]
Lenzer reported that Genetech
had contributed over $11 million to the Heart Association and also paid
$2.5 million to build the Heart Association a new headquarters. Only after
the these financial conflicts of interest became public knowledge, did the
Heart Association revise its class I recommendation and withdraw
statements that tPA "saves lives."
The Heart Association is hardly
unique: a recent report in JAMA[36]
(2002) found that 87% of the authors who wrote treatment practice
guidelines in all fields of medicine had financial ties with the
pharmaceutical industry. In 1998 the NEJM found that 96% of medical
journal authors whose findings were favorable to a product had financial
ties to the manufacturer.[37]
As questions have been raised about the value of mammography and other
cancer screening recommendations, one grows suspicious that most highly
publicized screening campaigns are launched by stakeholders with financial
interests in the business. Their recommendations may turn out to be
hazardous to public health.
Case 3: Subject selection
bias--antidepressant drug trials:
Dr. Thomas Laughren, head of the
FDA's psychiatric drug division made the following concessions at a
Houston conference (2000): "there is a certain amount of myth" in the
claimed efficacy of psychotropic drugs which have shown only marginal
effect above placebo. "We don't know how effective they are, only that in
clinical trials, they demonstrated somewhat greater efficacy than
placebo." He then acknowledged: "there isn't any standard for what effect
size is required to get a psychotropic drug on the market·.we have never,
in my experience, not approved a drug because of a finding that the effect
size is too marginal."[38]
To obtain even a marginal effect
above placebo, 60% to 85% of patients who are most likely to be prescribed
antidepressant drugs are excluded by the eligibility criteria. That's the
finding of a Brown University analysis[39]
of 31 antidepressant trials published from 1994 to 1998. Only 15 percent
of 346 depressed patients who were evaluated in a Rhode Island hospital
psychiatric clinic would have met the eligibility requirements of a
standard drug trial. Such a selection process inevitably skews the
results, thereby invalidating the published findings and claims about the
efficacy of antidepressants. Zimmerman expressed concern: "If
antidepressants are, in fact, not effective for some of these large
subgroups of depressed individuals, their prescription incurs an
unjustifiable exposure of risks and side effects, and alternative
treatments need to be considered."
I would also argue that if the
patients in clinical trials don't resemble the patients who are later
prescribed these drugs - what relevance do the trials have for clinical
care?
Case 4: Antidepressant drug
efficacy hype:
A report in the April 10, 2002
issue of JAMA by prominent psychopharmacologists who conducted a major
government sponsored, [40] 12
-site, controlled clinical trial comparing sertraline (Zoloft), Hyperricum
perforatum (St. John's wort) and placebo. The investigators acknowledged:
"An increasing number of studies
have failed to show a difference between active antidepressants and
placebo. Many of the presumed factors underlying this phenomenon were
carefully attended to in this study, e.g, adherence to quality control by
rater training, treatment adherence monitoring, inclusion of experienced
investigators, and carefully defined entry criteria. Despite all of this,
sertraline failed to separate from placebo on the two primary outcome
measures"
Between December 1998 and June
2000, 340 Adult outpatients with major depression and a baseline total
score on the Hamilton Depression Scale (HAM-D) of at least 20 were
recruited and randomly assigned to receive (900 to 1500 mg) St. John's
wort, (50 to 100 mg) Zoloft, or placebo for 8 weeks. Responders at week 8
could continue blinded treatment for another 18 weeks. The results of this
trial states: "on the 2 primary outcome measures, neither [Zoloft] nor
[St. John's wort] was significantly different from placebo."Full response occurred in 31.9% of the
placebo-treated patients vs 23.9% of the [St John's]ötreated patients and
24.8% of [Zoloft]-treated patients."
Clearly a dual dilemma faces
those who are invested in promoting psychopharmacolgy: if they admit that
the drugs don't really work, then placebo-controlled trials are ethically
justified. However, absent a demonstrable benefit of the drugs, it is
unethical to expose patients to the known side effects and the potential
long-term risks of harm. But such an acknowledgement would undercut the
financial interests of the pharmaceutical industry and all of the
stakeholders who depend on corporate largesse. The prominent
psychiatrists, whose names are too numerous to be listed at the head of
the JAMA article, found a way to spin the negative results of the trial.
In their conclusion they ignore their own findings, namely, that
neither the antidepressant drug, Zoloft, nor St. John's wort were more
effective than placebo. Indeed, placebo may have an edge. In their
conclusion the investigators pretend that Zoloft was not part of the 3-arm
trial: "This study fails to support the efficacy of H perforatum in
moderately severe major depression."
An accompanying JAMA editorial
by Dr. David Kupfer,[41]
past president of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology, also
puts a spin on the findings:
"The current study
on the use of St John's wort in the
treatment of MDD is the second one within a year to conclude that St
John's wort is not effective. These trials were conducted because, even
though St John's wort is widely used for the treatment of major depression
and depressive symptoms, its efficacy has not been clearly established·"
How could these prominent
leaders of psychiatry draw a conclusion that contradicts the
study findings? In compliance with JAMA's conflict of interest disclosure
policy, a long list appends the article disclosing some of the authors'
financial ties to industry - it speaks for itself.
A troubling question arises:
Why did the editors of JAMA fail to seek an independent evaluation of the
research findings? Why did JAMA select a psychiatrist whose financial ties
include membership on the advisory board of Pfizer, the drug company whose
product was being reviewed?
[42]
Case 5: Undisclosed negative
data:
An editorial in the British
Medical Journal by Richard Smith, "Maintaining the Integrity of the
Scientific Record,"[43]
stated: "We editors of medical journals worry that we sometimes publish
studies where the declared authors have not participated in the design of
the study, had no access to the raw data, and had little to do with the
interpretation of the data. Instead the sponsors of the study öoften
pharmaceutical companies - have designed the study and analyzed and
interpreted the data. Readers and editors are thus being deceived."
Even when a legitimate physician
who does not have financial conflicts of interest reviews a study, there
is no assurance that the process has not been corrupted. Here is an
example: in 2001, Dr. Michael Wolfe was asked to write an editorial in
JAMA about the findings of a six -month study testing the arthritis drug,
Celebrex, on more than 8,000 patients.
[44] The editors sent him the
manuscript reporting indicating they were anxious "to rush the findings
into print." Based on the data reported in the manuscript, Wolfe wrote a
favorable review. When he later saw the complete data - as a member of an
FDA advisory panel-- he was "flabbergasted." To his embarrassment he
discovered that the study had actually been a year long, and when all the
data was evaluated, Celebrex offered no proven safety advantage over two
older drugs in reducing the risk of ulcers. He also learned that the
study's 16 authors included faculty members of eight medical schools -
they were all employees of the manufacturer, Pharmcia, or paid
consultants. JAMA's editor, Catherine DeAngelis, is quoted in the
Washington Post, saying: "We are functioning on a level of trust that was,
perhaps, broken."31 Peer review
and the integrity of medical guidelines and the scientific literature have
all been corrupted by the corrosive influence of industry.
Case 6: The 1997 "pediatric rule" puts children's lives
at risk:
Children are being sought to
serve as "risk bearing subjects" to risk their lives to test drugs. For
example, the FDA approved a pediatric trial exposing 100 children to
Janssen Pharmaceutica's heartburn drug, Propulsid.[45]
FDA approved the trial and allowed babies to be enrolled even after the
drug had been linked to sudden deaths. The babies who were recruited were
diagnosed with gastroesophageal reflux - a condition hardly considered
life-threatening. Doctors say that most babies outgrow the problem by
their first birthday. Among the casualties was a 9-month old infant, Gage
Stevens. He was recruited by researchers at the University of Pittsburgh.
According to press reports the parents only learned about the risks
associated with Propulsid from an Associated Press report AFTER their baby
was dead.
The LA Times reported that
Propulsid's danger to the heart was identified as early as January 1995,
when FDA's senior gastrointestinal expert informed Janssen executives that
recent adverse-reaction reports showed their drug was prolonging the QT
interval, perhaps resulting in deaths. The British Medicines Control
Agency (BMCA) had warned against any use of Propulsid in infants since
1998, and cautioned against prescribing it to children up to age 12. The
consent form given to the parents falsely indicated that the FDA had
approved Propulsid for children. The parents said the doctor conducting
the clinical trial was adamant that Propulsid was the best treatment for
their child. The parents said they would never have consented, had they
known of the previous deaths. The mother was quoted by CBS News,
exclaiming: "It's like giving you chemotherapy for a toothache·the
benefits just don't outweigh the risks. I mean, it's reflux! It's not
something that's (going to kill him)."[46]
The final blow was delivered when the baby's parents learned from the
autopsy report that Gage's esophagus did not show any signs of
"significant inflammation or other hallmarks of gastroesophageal reflux."[47]
In other words, the baby didn't have the condition for which he was
entered as a subject into a fatal clinical trial.
A spokesman for Janssen (a
Johnson & Johnson subsidiary) indicated that the company did not promote
Propulsid for use by children. However, the LA Times reported, the company
acknowledged that it did make two "educational grants" to the North
American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition. The
society's literature advised doctors that Propulsid could be used safely
and effectively in children.
FDA did not pull the drug off
the market even as the death toll rose. In December 2000, the LA Times
reported that overall Propulsid has been cited as a suspect in 302 deaths.
FDA administrators now concede that the agency failed to contain
Propulsid's fatal risk. In comments to an FDA advisory committee in June
2000, FDA's Dr. Florence Houn said: "The labeling probably was not
effective." In the end, it was not government intervention that forced
Janssen to stop marketing Propulsid in the U.S., it was litigation. I
question the wisdom of a policy that encourages the use of children in
drug trials BEFORE the safety and efficacy of the drugs have even been
established in adults.
Case 7: Children exposed to
risks in psychotropic drug trials:
Psychotropic drugs are being
tested in children despite the acknowledged risks of harm. Psychotropic
drugs are advertised as normalizing a "chemical imbalance" in the brain.
In fact, they do the opposite: they induce profound changes in the central
nervous system with demonstrable physical and neurological impairments.[48]
Dr. Steven Hyman, former director of NIMH, an expert on the mechanisms by
which psychoactive drugs work, explained that, whether abused or
prescribed, the mechanisms by which psychoactive drugs work are the same.[49]
Hyman stated that antidepressants, psychostimulants, and anti-psychotics
created "perturbations in neurotransmitter function."[50]
The drugs' severe adverse side effects are symptoms of the drugs'
disruptive effect on the neurotransmitter system and on brain function.
In 2001 Dr. Benedetto Vitiello,
NIMH's director of Child and Adolescent Treatment and Preventive
Interventions Branch acknowledged the impact of FDAMA: "pediatric
psychopharmacology has recently seen an unprecedented expansion·clinical
trials in youths has more than doubled in the last few years."[51]
Indeed, children as young as three are being recruited to test
mind-altering drugs that may affect their developing brain. Parents are
being offered financial inducements to volunteer their children for drug
trials. The foremost problem with prescribing or testing psychotropic
drugs for children is the absence of any objective criteria for diagnosing
children with pathological behavioral problems to justify pharmacologic
intervention. Vitiello acknowledged "diagnostic uncertainty surrounding
most manifestations of psychopathology in early childhood."[52]
Vitiello also acknowledged the possibility of long-term harm: "The impact
of psychotropics on the developing brain is largely unknown, and possible
long-term effects of early exposure to these drugs have not been
investigated."
Eli Lilly's highly touted new
anti-psychotic, Zyprexa,[53]
reveals much about the collision between corporate interests and the
health and safety of children. In clinical trials averaging 6 weeks,
Zyprexa was tested in 2,500 adults. The drug was linked to serious, in
some cases life-threatening side effects requiring hospitalization in 22%
of those tested.24Acute weight
gain of 50 to 70 lbs is usual, and with it the increased risk of diabetes.
FDA data (under FOIA) reveals a 65% drop out rate, and only 26% favorable
response. During those 6 week clinical trials there were 20 deaths, of
which 12 were suicides.[54]
David Healy, who found a suicidal link to antidepressants (Selective
Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors) in his research says, as far as he can
establish, the data from these trials "demonstrate· a higher death rate on
Zyprexa than on any other antipsychotic ever recorded."
[55] In 2000, FDA approved
Zyprexa for short- term use only, in bi-polar patients.[56]
Yet, children aged six to eleven
were recruited for clinical trials to test the drug. According to their
published report, UCLA investigators tested Zyprexa on children who were
not even diagnosed as having schizophrenia. The children were diagnosed as
having a variety of questionable psychiatric disorders, including ADHD.[57]
According to the published report, all the children in the trial
experienced adverse effects, including sedation, acute weight gain, and
akathisia (restless agitation). The trial was terminated less than six
weeks after it had begun.
Controversy surrounds a Zyprexa
trial at Yale University. In that experiment, 31 youngsters aged 12 to 25
who have not been diagnosed with any psychiatric illness are being exposed
to the drug for one year. The stated rationale given by the researchers
(who are under contract with he sponsor) is their speculation that these
children may be "at risk" for schizophrenia. Since there are, as yet, no
objective tests or biological markers for the illness ö they
hypothesize without evidence, merely on the basis of conjecture. The
shaky basis for their conjecture is that assumption that the children may
develop schizophrenia because one of their siblings has been diagnosed
with the disorder.
The risk of schizophrenia for
the general population is 1%. For siblings the risk increases from 2% to
15% - in other words there is 85% likelihood that these children will
never develop schizophrenia.
Given the absence of
scientifically accurate tools for interpreting psychiatric symptoms,
psychiatrists cannot as yet accurately diagnose schizophrenia much less
predict which children will get it. Is it ethical to expose healthy
children to risks of drug- induced pathology on such speculation? The
Wall Street Journal aptly noted that such a study "raises the question of
whether the drug companies are mainly interested in "creating" a new
illness that requires drug treatment."
Conflicts of interest in clinical trials result in
deadly medicine:
Conflicts of interest have
corrupted the soul of the American university, the ethics of medicine, the
integrity of the scientific record, and the safety of patients who serve
as human subjects in pre- and post-marketing clinical trials. Adverse drug
reactions in FDA-approved drugs are the leading cause of death in the
United States.2,
3 The JAMA report advises
physicians against prescribing new drugs "unless they represent an
important medical advance" because newly approved drugs are likely to be
unsafe - even lethal. The JAMA report corroborated the findings of the LA
Times earlier report: in some cases FDA approved new drugs despite
pre-marketing evidence indicating potential danger. In his editorial in
JAMA, FDA's Dr. Robert Temple attempts to disavow agency responsibility,
while acknowledging: "Premarketing trials in a few thousand (usually
relatively uncomplicated) patients do not detect all of a drug's adverse
effects·and sometimes the postmarketing discoveries cause the drug to be
withdrawn."[58]
Why did the FDA's track record
of protecting the public from unsafe drugs worsen since 1993? The answer
is undue corporate influence and a tainted drug testing and approval
process that has compromised the safety of both clinical trial subjects
and patients in clinical care. The absence of independent, third- party
reviewers has undermined the safety of the drug development and approval
process. A tainted process has led the FDA to approve deadly drugs that
killed patients while enriching those drugs' manufacturers. The LA Times
reported that seven lethal drugs that were ultimately withdrawn between
1997 and 2000, generated $5 billion in sales. It remains to be seen how
the American public will react to the revelation that new drugs are less
safe than old drugs. How will Americans respond to the revelation that
when they take a new, FDA-approved drug, they are essentially testing the
drug's safety? Public trust is not likely to be restored until the
integrity of the process and the institutions is restored through
independent unbiased review. When the condition is life-threatening, or
when the new drug offers a significant advance over existing treatments,
the risks may be justified. But no one should have to die from a heartburn
drug or a diet drug.
[1] Kelch, RP, "Maintaining the
public trust in clinical research," NEJM, Jan 24, 2002, vol 346: 285-287.
[2]Lasser KE, et al "Timing
of New Black Box Warnings and Withdrawals for Prescription Medications,"
JAMA, May 1, 2002, 287:2215-2220.
[3] Lazarou J, Pemeranz B,
Corey PN. "Incidence of adverse drug reactions in hospitalized patients: a
meta-analysis of prospective studies," JAMA, 1998, 279: 1200-1205. See
also, Wood AJ. The safety of new medicines: the importance of asking the
right questions. JAMA.1999, 281:1753-1754.
[5] The seven drugs (and the
number of suspected deaths they caused) are: Lotronex (5 deaths), Redux
(123 deaths), Raxar (13 deaths), Posicor (100 deaths), Duract (68 deaths,
including 11 liver failures), Rezulin (391 deaths, 91 liver failures),
Propulsid (302 deaths) . The figure is based on adverse drug reaction
reports submitted to the FDA which is estimated to reflect 10% of actual
adverse drug reactions. See Willman, 2000.
[6]
The five additional drugs withdrawn between 1997 and Aug 2001 are: Raplon,
Hismanal, Seldane, Pondomin, and Baycol. See, Willman, D. "Drug Tied to
Deaths Is Pulled" Los Angeles Times, Aug 9, 2001, Front page
[7]
Bodenheimer, T. "Uneasy Alliance -- Clinical Investigators and the
Pharmaceutical Industry," The New England Journal of Medicine -- May 18,
2000 -- Vol. 342, No. 20,
This comprehensive master
physician list gives this industry the most powerful marketing tool in the
world. "Overall spending on pharmaceutical promotion increased more than
10 percent last year, to $13.9 billion from $12.4 billion in 1998."
[16] "Just how tainted has medicine become?" Editorial, The
Lancet, Vol. 359, Number 9313, April 6, 2002
[18] Zimmerman, R. "Drug Makers Find a Windfall Testing Adult
Drugs on Kids," The Wall Street Journal, Feb 5, 2001.
[19] A 2000 study of nursing home patients, for example, found
that of the 20,000 fatal or life-threatening medication reactions, 80%
were preventable. A 2001 report by the General Accounting Office, "Drug
Safety: Most Drugs Withheld in Recent Years Had Greater Health Risks for
Women." See, Cohen, J. OVER DOSE: The Case Against the Drug Companies,
Tarcher /Putnam, 2001.
[20] For example: Roe, L. Dangerous experiments. Investigative
Report, Channel 5 KSTP-TV News, Minneapolis, MN, October 26, 1994;
Willwerth, J. Madness in fine print. 1994. Time. November 7: 62-63;
Horowitz, J. 1994. For the sake of science. LAT Magazine. September 11.
cover story; and Hilts, P. 1994. Agency faults a UCLA study for suffering
of mental patients. NYT. March 10. A-10; Beil, L. Psychiatric research
raises legal red flag. 1996. Dallas Morning News. April 29: H-1, 10A;
Doris, M. Experimental ethics. 1996. Boston Phoenix October 24: online at
http://www.bostonphoenix.com/alt1/archive/new/96/10/24/ETHICS.html>;
Epstein, K. C. and Sloat, B. "Drug trials: do people know the truth about
experiments? Series. 1996. The Plain Dealer. December 15-18: front page;
Weiss, R. 1998. Research volunteers unwittingly at risk. Washington Post.
August 1: A-1; Kerr, K. 1998. Informed consent? Drug researchers
criticized for involving psychiatric patients without fully explaining the
risks. NY Newsday. September 8: C-6-7; Wadman, M. 1998. Research roulette:
are the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center's schizophrenia studies
harming patients?" City Paper. July 1; Birnbaum, G. 1999. Human guinea
pigs: State eyes 'no consent' medical testing. NY Post, January 17: front
page; Monmaney, T. U.S. suspends research at VA hospital in L.A. LAT,
March 24: front page; Bonfield, T. 1999. UC research deaths go unreported:
memos says rules were broken. Cincinnati Enquirer. April 28: front page;
Hilts, P. J. and Stolberg, S. G. 1999. Ethics lapses at Duke halt dozens
of human experiments. NYT, May 13. A-26; Bonnfield, T. 1999. UC defends
human research: Patients told not to worry about reporting methods. The
Cincinnati Enquirer, April 30: PAGE?; Wadman, M. 1999. NIH ethics office
clamps down on Duke. Nature. May 20: 190; Kaplan, S. and Brownlee, S.
1999. Duke's hazards: did medical experiments put patients needlessly at
risk?" U.S. News & World Report. May 24: 66-70; Manier, J. and Berens, M.
1999. UIC tolerated research ethics lapses, critics say. Chicago Tribune,
September 3:1; Berens, M. J. and Manier, J. 1999. Safeguards get trampled
in rush for research cash. Chicago Tribune, September 5: front page;
Michaud, A. Lawmakers urging thorough investigation of UC research. 1999.
Cincinnati Enquirer. April 27;.Nelson, D. and Weiss, R. 2000. Gene test
deaths not reported promptly. Washington Post. January 31: A1; Kaufman, M.
and Julien, A. 2000. Medical research: can we trust it?" Investigative
series. The Hartford Courant, April 9-11: front page; Nelson, D. and
Weiss, R. FDA halts experiments on genes at university: probe of teen's
death uncovers deficiencies. Washington Post, January 22. A-1; Levine, S.
and Weiss, R. 2001. Hopkins told to halt trials funded by U.S. Washington
Post. July 19. Front page. Online at <http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A23208-2001Jul19.html>;
Kolata G. 2001. U.S. suspends human research at Johns Hopkins after a
death. NYT, July 20. Online at <http://www.nytimes.com/2001/07/20/health/20RESE.html?pagewanted=print>;
Wilson, D. and Heath, D. 2001.
The blood-cancer experiment. Uninformed consent series. Seattle Times.
July 20. front page. Online at: <http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/uninformed_consent/bloodcancer/>;
Caplan, A. 2001. Research ban at Hopkins a sign of ethical crisis.
Opinion. Special to MSNBC, July 20. Online at <http://www.msnbc.com/news/602889.asp;
Solov, D and McEnery, R. "Healthy woman died in UH Alzheimer's study
Hospital, CWRU cleared of significant wrongdoing; project suspended,"
Cleaveland Plain Dealer, December 21, 2001, Front page; Lawler, A. " U.S.
Questions Harvard Research in China," SCIENCE, April 5, 2002 vol .296,
p.26; Lemonick, MD and Goldstein, A. "At Your Own Risk," Time Magazine,
Sunday, Apr. 14, 2002, Cover story.
http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,230358,00.html.
[21] The institutions were: Veterans Affairs Greater Los
Angeles Health Care System; Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center;
Friends Research Institute, Inc., West Coast Division; King Drew Medical
Center; Duke University Medical Center; Virginia Commonwealth University;
University of Oklahoma, Tulsa Campus; University of Colorado Heath
Sciences Center; University of Pennsylvania and Johns Hopkins University;
University of Illinois, Chicago (involved all Federally supported
research); University of Alabama, Birmingham; and University of Texas
Medical Branch at Galveston. See OHRP website. Letters of determination.
Online at:
http://ohrp.osophs.dhhs.gov/detrm_letrs/lindex.html
[22] U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services. Office of the Inspector General, Report,.1998.
Institutional Review Boards: A Time for Reform. June, OEI-01-97-00913. In
a follow-up report, the Inspector General was highly critical of Federal
agencies for making "minimal progress" at carrying out any recommendations
for improving the performance of university panels that review research
involving human subjects. She had laudatory words only for the director of
the Office of Protection from Research Risks who had suspended research at
seven institutions since 1998, suggesting that such enforcement actions
should continue. See, and OIG Report. 2000. Protecting Human Research
subjects. April, OEI-01-00197.
[23] The institutions were:
Veterans Affairs Greater Los Angeles Health Care System;
Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center; Friends Research Institute,
Inc., West Coast Division; King Drew Medical Center; Duke University
Medical Center; Virginia Commonwealth University; University of Oklahoma,
Tulsa Campus; University of Colorado Heath Sciences Center; University of
Illinois, Chicago, University of Alabama, Birmingham; and University of
Texas Medical Branch at Galveston., University of Pennsylvania and Johns
Hopkins University. See OHRP website. Letters of determination. Online at
:
http://ohrp.osophs.dhhs.gov/detrm_letrs/lindex.html.
[24] Shalala, D. 2000.
"Protecting research subjects--what must be done," NEJM. 343: 808-810
[25] See, Brainard, J. 2000. NIH and FDA Should Do More to
Protect Human Research Subjects. Chronicle of Higher Education. April 13,
p. A-38. See, Hilts, P. 2000. Medical-Research Official Cites Ethics Woes.
The New York Times. August 17.
[26] Alliance for Human
Research Protection, letter to Tommy Thompson, Sec. Of HHS, Feb. 7, 2002.
[28] Whitaker, R. and Kong,
D. 1998. Doing harm: research on the mentally ill. Investigative series.
Boston Globe. November 15-18: front page.
[29]Shelton, D L. "Ethical
concerns focus microscope on research rules
AMA
News
staff. March 1, 1999.
[30] Eliott, C., "Pharma buys
a conscience," The American Prospect, Sept 24-Oct 8, 2001, vol. 12
[31] For example, Stanford
University's Center for Biomedical Ethics reportedly received a $1 million
gift from SmithKine Beecham. The University of Pennsylvania's Center for
Bioethics receives funding from such corporate giants as Monsanto,
Millennium Pharmaceutical, Geron corp, Pfizer, AstraZeneca, E.I. duPont,
and Human Genome Sciences.
[32] See, Stecklow, S. and
Johannes, L. 1997. Test Case: drug makers relied on clinical researchers
who now await trial. Wall Street Journal, Aug. 15, front page.
[33] Lenzer, J. ""Alteplase
for stroke: money and optimistic claims buttress the "brain attack"
campaign," BMJ, March 23, 2002, 324: 723-729
[34] Lenzer citing: Marsa, L.
Prescription for profits: how the pharmaceutical industry bankrolled the
unholy alliance between science and business. 1997, NY: Scribner, p. 160.
[35] Hoffman, JR, "Against:
And just what is the emperor of stroke wearing?" BMJ, 2000, 173: 149-150.
Dr. Hoffman stated: "Despite the enormous propaganda machine pushing the
exciting fashion of thrombolytic therapy for acute ischemic stroke, there
is good reason to question the efficacy of such therapy and overwhelming
reason to question its effectiveness."
[36] Choudhry NK, Stelfox HT,
Detsky AS. "Relationships between authors of clinical practice guidelines
and the pharmaceutical industry," JAMA 2002. 287: 612-617.
[37] Bodenheimer, T. "Uneasy
alliance - clinical investigators and the pharmaceutical industry," New
Eng J Med, 2000, 342: 1539-1544; See also, Bodenheimer, T. "Conflict of
interest in clinical drug trials: a risk factor for scientific
misconduct," DHHS Conflict of Interest Conference, Aug 15. 2000
http://ohrp.osophs.dhhs.gov/coi/bodenheimer.htm.
[38] Thomas Laughren, M.D.
"FDA's perspective on the use of placebo in psychotropic drug trials,"
University of Texas, Dept. of psychiatry and Committee for the Protection
of Human Subjects. Placebo in mental health research: science, ethics and
the law. April 7 and 8, 2000. Audio tape in author's possession.
See, Zimmerman, M, American Journal
of Psychiatry, March 2002
[40] "Effect
of Hypericum perforatum (St John's Wort) in Major Depressive
Disorder: A Randomized Controlled
Trial," JAMA Vol. 287 No. 14, April
10, 2002, at:
[41]Kupfer, D. J.MD and Frank, E. "Placebo
in Clinical Trials for Depression
Complexity and Necessity," Editorial, JAMA. 2002;287:1807-1814.
[42] Dr. Kupfer also serves on the advisory boards of Eli Lilly
and Forest. See, Kupfer, DJ, Findling, RL, Geller, B and Ghaemi, N,
"Treatment of bipolar disorder during childhood, adolescent, and young
adult years, Journal of Clinical Psychiatry,
http://www.psychiatrist.com/audiograph/kupfer/index.htm.
[43] Smith, R. " Maintaining
the integrity of the scientific record," British Medical Journal, Sept.,
2001, vol 323: 588.
[47] Spice, B. Science
Editor. 2000. Was baby treated for ailment he didn't have? Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette. July 9. Online at: http://www.post-gazette.com/healthscience/20010709gage0709p5.asp.
[48] Madsen Al, et al, 1998.
Neuroleptics in progressive structural brain abnormalities in psychiatric
illness. The Lancet. 352: (9130) 784; Harrison P, et al. 1999. Review: the
neuropathological effects of antipsychotic drugs, Schizophr Res. 40:87‑99
and Gur, R.E, et al. 1998. A follow‑up magnetic resonance imaging study of
schizophrenia. Archives of General Psychiatry. 55: 145‑152 and Gur, R.E.,
et al, 1998. Subcortical MRI volumes in neuroleptic‑naive and treated
patients with schizophrenia. American Journal of Psychiatry.
155:1711‑1717,
http://ajp.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/content/full/155/12/1711#F1J and
Jauss M. 1998. Severe akathisia during olanzapine treatment of acute
schizophrenia. Pharmacopsychiatry. 31:146‑8.
[49] Hyman, SE. and Nestler,
EJ. 1996. Initiation and adaptation: a paradigm for understanding
psychoactive drug action. Am J Psychiatry. 153:151-162. See also, Konradi,
C., et al. 1996. Amphetamine and dopamine-induced immediate early gene
expression in striatal neurons depends on postsynaptic NMDA receptors and
calcium. Journal of Neuroscience. 16:4231-9.
[51] Vitiello, B "
psychopharmacology for young children: clinical needs and research
opportunities," Pediatrics, Oct 2001, Vol. 108 Issue 4, p983, 7p. Quote,
p. 987 (estimated).
[56] Zyprexa (olanzapine) was
approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, on March 19, 2000 for
"the short-term treatment of acute manic episodes associated with bipolar
disorder."
[57] See Krishnamoorthy, J.
and King, B. H. 1998. Open-label olanzapine treatment in five
preadolescent children. Journal of Child and Adolescent
Psychopharmacology. 8:107-13.
[58]Temple, RT and Himmel, MH
"Safety of Newly Approved Drugs Implications for Prescribing," JAMA,
Editorial, Vol. 287 No. 17, May 1, 2002, p. 2273.
ALL INFORMATION, DATA, AND
MATERIAL CONTAINED, PRESENTED, OR PROVIDED HERE IS FOR GENERAL INFORMATION
PURPOSES ONLY AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED AS REFLECTING THE KNOWLEDGE OR OPINIONS
OF THE PUBLISHER, AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED OR INTENDED AS PROVIDING MEDICAL OR
LEGAL ADVICE. THE DECISION WHETHER OR NOT TO VACCINATE IS AN IMPORTANT AND
COMPLEX ISSUE AND SHOULD BE MADE BY YOU, AND YOU ALONE, IN CONSULTATION WITH
YOUR HEALTH CARE PROVIDER.
"A foolish faith in authority is the worst enemy of truth."
-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
"I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education."
-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820
Sandy's Scandals Column
Past and current Scandals
- columns by Sandy Gottstein (aka Mintz)*
* ►March 17, 2010 - FDA
Warned
Psychiatrist Over Foster Kids In Trials - Pharmalot - "A
Florida psychiatrist who treated a 7-year-old foster child before the
boy committed suicide last year received an FDA warning letter for
failing “to protect the rights, safety and welfare” of children
enrolled in clinical trials, The Miami Herald reports. The Feb. 4
letter said Sohail Punjwani overmedicated children who were enrolled in
clinical trials for undisclosed drugs."