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When that happens, “the design of the study … likely is selected by the drug company to achieve the best results,” says Dariush Mozaffarian of Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School.

Nevertheless, two-thirds of medical-school-research administrators accept industry-sponsored clinical-trial contracts that forbid their scientists from altering the study design, according to a survey published last year in the New England Journal of Medicine, authored by Michelle Mello of the Harvard School of Public Health. Nearly that many accept contracts that do allow the sponsoring company to alter the design. Less than a third find it unacceptable for the sponsor to store the data and “release portions” to the school’s scientists, and half think it’s okay for the sponsor to write the article, as long as the academic researcher “may review the manuscript and suggest revisions.”

With such constraints imposed by industry and embraced by so many sponsoring academic institutions, how can the work of even the best-intentioned researcher be trusted? “I think it’s reasonable to be suspicious,” says Harold Sox, editor of Annals of Internal Medicine, one of the world’s top peer-reviewed medical journals. “People don’t have the time to read the fine print, looking for evidence that the researchers had freedom to be scientists.”

Click to see a detailed account of conflict-of-interest issues with an article on the drug FosamaxMerck, for instance, appears to have controlled virtually everything about a 2002 Annals paper touting the use of alendronate, a/k/a Merck’s Fosamax, on osteoporosis. The article’s lead author was Susan L. Greenspan, then a Harvard Medical School professor and director of the Beth Israel Deaconess Osteoporosis Prevention and Treatment Center, and now with University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. But Merck paid for the recruitment and participation of 327 patients; Merck collected the data from 25 separate facilities; Merck employees took care of “coordinating the early phases of the study” — that is, the design and execution of the trials — and of “providing expertise in study conduct.” And Merck retained control and ownership of the research itself.

Most of these procedural details are revealed in the Annals article’s disclosures and acknowledgments. But such qualifications to a study’s objectivity rarely appear where many people learn about the results: in news articles or on Web sites. In 2001 — the year before Greenspan’s article appeared — Fosamax barely topped $1 billion in sales; in 2003 it made $2.7 billion. (Greenspan did not return calls from the Phoenix.)

Mozaffarian at Brigham and Women’s says he avoids involvement in studies that originate with drug companies. His article in American Journal of Cardiology last December included this disclosure statement: “Pfizer had no role in the study conception, design, implementation, analysis, interpretation, or manuscript preparation.” For that article, he and his colleagues wanted to pursue a hypothesis about the drug in Pfizer’s Lipitor. “So we contacted Pfizer and asked for their database,” Mozaffarian says. Pfizer provided it and also ponied up a grant, while agreeing to have no input or control over the research or results.

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  Topics: News Features , Science and Technology, Technology, Massachusetts General Hospital,  More more >
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Comments
Med school drug pushers
Next time, do ALL of your research. This kind of one-sided article without benefit of knowledge of already existing regulations and guidances by both journals and agencies is disgraceful.
By katharinb on 04/13/2006 at 1:59:12
Med school drug pushers
there is partial truth to this article. ghost writing and slanted research should never be tolerated--by the press, the public or especially the medical profession. however, who do you think funds research? the government cannot begin to fund ALL the studies that are needed, and trying to deal with federal paperwork to get a research grant is so onerous as to be impossible. the fda process for approval is difficult. once a drug is researched and released other benefits ("off-label") and uses come to light; but it is seldom cost effective to go back thru the process to get fda approval. i will bet you also complain @ the high costs of meds. everything should be cheap and so safe there are NO side-effects. i have NO pharmaceutical affliations. i don't accept drug samples and hardly ever see pharma reps. drugs ARE ridiculously expensive-- but they are also sometimes very effective. i suppose your mother /father/siblings/ grandparents/ yourself don't use any of these drugs? by the way, i work at scott and white and know the researchers there-- who get zero personal benefit from this research and have only the highest ethical and moral standards. do they do it for free? did you research and write this article out of the goodness of your heart? robert henry, D.O.
By bobdo on 04/13/2006 at 3:45:34
Med school drug pushers
If you had conducted your research properly, you would have called our company and asked about the relationships with our medical writers instead of assuming "No standard exists for the relationship among these writers, the company, and the academic researcher"...this is completely inaccurate and you misrepresent our processes in this article. We have well defined internal process for communications and quality between us (the company) and our writers and academic researcher. In addition, our site specifically ... on multiple pages ... states that we support the AMWA position statement: "The American Medical Writers Association (AMWA) recognizes the valuable contributions of biomedical communicators to the publication team. Biomedical communicators who contribute substantially to the writing or editing of a manuscript should be acknowledged with their permission and with disclosure of any pertinent professional or financial relationships. In all aspects of the publication process, biomedical communicators should adhere to the AMWA code of ethics" ... we do NOT promote ghost writing and we do NOT support poorly researched articles such as this one. - Kersten Hammond, President & CEO
By MedBio Publications on 09/08/2006 at 9:55:52

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