The Phoenix Network:
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 
Media -- Dont Quote Me  |  News Features  |  Talking Politics  |  This Just In

Another set of private, for-profit companies now oversee the clinical trials themselves, adding another interested party to the process. The growth of these “Contract Research Organizations” (CROs) is one of the biggest changes in the medical-research field over the past 20 years, say many in the field locally. Some argue this change is for the better, and even many skeptics agree that CROs often manage trials more efficiently than academic institutions. “I think the quality of the research and the quality of the data collected is actually better now, because of the growth of the CRO industry,” says Douglas Gregory. His CRO, Cardiovascular Clinical Studies, offers planning, clinical development, and, yes, assistance in authorship. “We’ll assist them in writing the article,” says Gregory. “It’s done in a very collegial fashion.”

The entire executive team of Gregory’s company consists of doctors currently affiliated with Tufts-NEMC or the Tufts University School of Medicine — including its chief scientific officer, Marvin Konstam, author of the Vioxx-is-safe study already mentioned. Another local CRO, Boston Clinical Trials, is mostly staffed with doctors affiliated with Tufts or St. Elizabeth’s.

Then there are the consultants, who provide a range of marketing services, including clinical research, to pharma and biomed companies. One of Boston-based Analysis Group’s service areas is “managing scientific and medical outcomes.” Waltham’s Decision Resources “offers a rich array of research publications advisory services.” In Cambridge, Abt Associates vice-president Chris Pashos co-authored 10 articles published just last year. A company called i3 Innovus, which co-authored 16 medical-journal articles last year, “provides integrated scientific strategies and solutions throughout the pharmaceutical product lifecycle.” It has a Boston office which is home base to its vice-president of US operations, Milton Weinstein, a Harvard Medical School and Harvard School of Public Health professor.

Matter of trust
This burgeoning field of industry-paid ghostwriters inevitably leads to concerns about the spinning of the data. Gwosdow admits that the pressure is there. “If they try to stretch the data — which I certainly have had companies do — I bring it to their attention,” she says. Usually, “we can find words that the data can support.”

Gwosdow once walked away from a ghostwriting job, when the client wanted to stretch the data further than she was comfortable with. But, she acknowledges, for all she knows, the company found someone else to do it, and then found a journal to publish it.

Or the company could bury the bad data. One study found that a quarter of all large clinical trials presented at annual oncology meetings were never published. And industry-sponsored research that does get published is five times more likely to have a positive conclusion about the sponsor’s drug than independently sponsored research — regardless of the prestigious academic institution’s name on the article — another study concluded.

“The sources of knowledge that doctors have been trained to trust have been taken over by the medical marketing community,” says Abramson. “We can never trust what we’re reading.”
< prev  1  |  2  |  3  |  4  |  5  |  6  |  7  |  8  | 
Related: The underdog, On being a widow of World of Warcraft, Learning not to kill, More more >
  Topics: News Features , Science and Technology, Technology, Massachusetts General Hospital,  More more >
  • Share:
  • Share this entry with Facebook
  • Share this entry with Digg
  • Share this entry with Delicious
  • RSS feed
  • Email this article to a friend
  • Print this article
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

ARTICLES BY DAVID S. BERNSTEIN
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   COAKLEY CASHES IN AT THE BAR  |  December 02, 2009
    It's no surprise that Martha Coakley has raised much of her money for her US Senate campaign from lawyers — that has been her professional and social circle for pretty much her entire adult life.
  •   THE X FACTOR  |  November 24, 2009
    Martha Coakley should be plenty thankful for the holiday weekend. The polls suggest that, if nothing significant changes between now and the December 8 primary, she should handily claim the Democratic nomination for US Senate.
  •   LADIES' MAN  |  November 18, 2009
    Early last week, Harvard's Kennedy School of Government announced suddenly that Nancy Pelosi, the Speaker of the US House of Representatives, would speak at a forum that Friday afternoon.
  •   HAS OBAMA PEAKED? NO, HE HASN'T  |  November 12, 2009
    Barack Obama's popularity should not be judged by the day-to-day, media-driven vagaries of politics — nor by the wishful thinking of his opponents.
  •   THE QUIET STORM  |  November 04, 2009
    In recent weeks, Governor Deval Patrick has been receiving some of his best press in a long time — which is to say, he’s gotten very little coverage at all.

 See all articles by: DAVID S. BERNSTEIN

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed 



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2009 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group