The Phoenix Network:
 
 
 
About  |  Advertise
 
News Features  |  Talking Politics  |  This Just In
WFNX_1000x50g

Med school drug pushers

How scientists are selling out to drug companies
By DAVID S. BERNSTEIN  |  January 28, 2010

MED SCHOOL DRUG PUSHERS: Scientists are selling out to drug companies.You may have heard of a little ongoing row about a Merck drug called Vioxx, which was pulled from the market in 2004 due to evidence that it caused serious heart problems in some users. According to the allegations, Merck aggressively marketed Vioxx as safe and effective for pain relief, while repressing knowledge that the drug raised the risk of heart attack. This week, another plaintiff won a multi-million-dollar jury award; 9650 more lawsuits nationwide are still pending.

What you may not know is that one of Merck’s most effective allies in marketing Vioxx was Marvin A. Konstam, a professor of medicine at Tufts University, chief of cardiology at Tufts-affiliated New England Medical Center (NEMC), and a paid consultant for Merck. In 2001 — a year after serious questions about Vioxx’s safety came to light — Konstam was the lead author of an article in the journal Circulation that found “no evidence” that Vioxx caused more cardiovascular problems than alternative pain medicines or placebos. The article was cited in dozens of other articles.

It also offered evidence, some say, of how Boston’s prestigious medical institutions — one of the area’s biggest assets — are being used and abused by pharmaceutical and medical-device companies to market their products.

Why? Because Konstam himself did not actually conduct or oversee any clinical trials for the 2001 article: the data was all provided to him by Merck from the company’s own trials. Nor did Konstam decide which trial results were included in the study: that, too, was handled by Merck, and critics allege that its findings were flawed. (The article, however, is not implicated in current lawsuits.) Five Merck employees were listed as co-authors of the study. The article’s acknowledgments cited Qinfen Yu for doing the data analysis, without mentioning that Yu was also a Merck employee. It also thanked Diana Rogers for “preparation of the manuscript,” omitting that she was a ghostwriter hired by Merck. Despite all this, the first author you see on the article is Marvin A. Konstam, and the first institutional name is NEMC. Only in the fine print do you find the co-authors’ Merck affiliation.

This is increasingly how medical research is getting done these days. Drug and medical-device companies conceive, finance, manage, and even write projects. Then they enlist researchers with affiliations that are trusted as independent intellectual authorities — such as Harvard Medical School, Brigham and Women’s, or Dana Farber — to put their names on the articles. When conducted in this manner, medical research is sometimes little more than marketing garbed in lab coats.

Scientists lend their names to such studies for any number of reasons: for the prestige of publishing (sometimes in quest of tenure), to land a grant, to maintain a lucrative consulting relationship with the company, or simply out of genuine scientific interest in the subject matter. Critics say these scientists usually don’t see themselves as willing instruments of pharma/biotech sales-and-marketing teams. But there is little doubt that the companies see them that way.

1  |  2  |  3  |  4  |  5  |  6  |  7  |  8  |   next >
Related: The underdog, 2010 Muzzle Awards on campus, Heading for health, More more >
  Topics: News Features , Science and Technology, Technology, Massachusetts General Hospital,  More more >
| More

ARTICLES BY DAVID S. BERNSTEIN
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   FROM THE PENITENTIARY TO THE PRESIDENTIAL RACE, IT’S OUR ANNUAL MEMORIAL DAY ROAST OF MASSACHUSETTS POLS  |  May 25, 2012
    Welcome to the fourth annual Boston Phoenix Memorial Day Roast of Massachusetts politicians! I love looking around the room every year, seeing so many familiar faces of elected officials.
  •   A MORE PERFECT UNION  |  May 18, 2012
    People will surely debate for years to come whether President Barack Obama's self-described "evolution" on universal, legal, same-sex marriage caused, or simply reflected, a turning point on the issue in the United States.
  •   MITT & THE GOP BOYS’ CLUB  |  May 10, 2012
    Last week, Barack Obama's re-election campaign launched a Web slide show, "The Life of Julia," depicting a woman helped throughout her years by Obama policies, and warning that — if elected — Mitt Romney would undo all of them.
  •   COULD THE BAY STATE’S RON PAUL-LOVING DELEGATES RUIN ROMNEY’S CORONATION?  |  May 02, 2012
    Saturday was an embarrassment of epic proportions for Mitt Romney and the Massachusetts Republican Party — an organization that, as I've chronicled in recent months, is essentially an extension of the Romney machine.
  •   PRESCRIPTION POTHOLE  |  April 25, 2012
    It seems strange to say that politicians lack the courage to pass a bill that's favored by the vast majority of their constituents. But that's where Massachusetts stands on its long, strange trip to legalize distribution of medically prescribed marijuana.

 See all articles by: DAVID S. BERNSTEIN



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2012 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group