Showing posts with label Big Pharma. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Big Pharma. Show all posts

Monday, March 21, 2016

How have pharmaceutical companies corrupted medical literature?

Physicians, pharmacists, nurses, lawyers, administrators, policy makers and many others depend on medical journals for information.  As the best clinical outcomes are sought for each patient; evidence based practice is the standard.

Physicians look to medical journals for up to date, accurate information about current medications and treatment options.  Peer-reviewed journals containing double blinded randomized control trials are the gold standard, with a meta-analysis of those trials being the best evidence.

Prescribers make medication choices based on the published literature, their personal experience, and the experiences of their patients. 

What if our medical literature is being unduly influenced and altered by those with financial gains at stake?
What if throughout the process of testing and approving and marketing new medications, pharmaceutical companies are altering the information prescribers receive?

This article will discuss 7 stages at which biased and false information has already been and still may be introduced into medical literature.
  1. Data Ownership
  2. Drug Trial Design
  3. Data Analysis
  4. Ghostwriting Articles
  5. Publication Bias/Omitted Information
  6. Journal Reprints
  7. Advertisements in Journals


STAGE 1: Data Ownership 



Problem: Drug trials are often designed to ensure that the resulting data are owned by the pharmaceutical company and are never made available to clinical research sites, prescribers, or the public. 

Example: In Denmark, 44 industry-initiated randomized trials were approved in 1994-1995 by the Scientific-Ethical Committee for Copenhagen and Frederiksberg.  
There were constraints on the publication rights in 40 (91%) of the protocols. 22 (50%) noted that the sponsor either owned the data, needed to approve the manuscript, or both. None of these constraints were stated in any of the trial publications.

Problem: In the competition for research funds, American academic institutions are likely to compromise ethical standards, granting data ownership and more to pharmaceutical companies.

Example: In a survey of 107 American medical schools it was found that 80% would allow a multicenter trial agreement that granted data ownership to the sponsor. 69% of the administrators said that the competition for research funds created pressures on them to compromise the conditions of the contract.
This leads to the following problem, found in a second survey of American medical schools: In a survey of 108 American medical schools it was found that “Academic institutions routinely engage in industry-sponsored research that fails to adhere to ICMJE (International Committee of Medical Journal Editors) guidelines regarding trial design, access to data, and publication rights.”

When drug trials are pre-designed to grant data ownership, analysis, and manuscript approval to the industry sponsor, the potential for biased publications escalates.


STAGE 2: Drug Trial Design


Problem: In head to head drug trials, the standard medication may be dosed or administered incorrectly, making the new drug look better by faulty comparison.

Many drug trials are designed to compare a new medication to the current standard medication.  If the standard medication is dosed incorrectly, or administered in the wrong way, efficacy may decrease.  In a head to head comparison, this can lead to the incorrect conclusion that the new medication is better because it had higher efficacy than the standard medication.

Example: Prior to FDA approval of Voriconazole, a study was designed to compared Voriconazole to Amphotericin B in the treatment of invasive aspergillosis:

277 patients were randomized into the two treatment groups and completed the trial.  The standard dosing and route of administration was followed:
  • IV Voriconazole for 7 days, then oral medication.
  • IV Amphotericin B

However the length of treatment was substantially different for the two groups.
  • The median duration of voriconazole treatment was 77 days.
  • The median duration of amphotericin B treatment was 10 days.

With the new medication (Voriconazole) being given for an additional 67 days it is not surprising that the conclusion stated: “Initial therapy with voriconazole led to better responses and improved survival and resulted in fewer severe side effects than the standard approach of initial therapy with amphotericin B.”

STAGE 3: Data Analysis


Problem: Data analysis is often controlled by the industry sponsor and data are often manipulated in favor of the new drug.
Example: When trial endpoints are changed or modified, it is impossible to know if new drugs met their goals.  A 2011 Study analyzed all Randomized Control Trials published in 6 medical journals over a 2 year period (2008-2010).  The journals selected were: New England Journal of Medicine, Lancet, JAMA, Annals of Internal Medicine, BMJ, Archives of Internal Medicine. Out of 2,592 original articles which were reviewed, only 316 reported a pre-specified primary endpoint. We don’t know what the other 2,276 trials were hoping to prove when they started the trial. Only the sponsoring drug company and the FDA likely have that information.  
Of the 316 studies that stated their pre-determined endpoint, 116 (37%) ended up reporting a surrogate primary endpoint and 106 (34%) used a composite primary endpoint.
Surrogate and composite endpoints do not always represent findings that are clinically or statistically significant.
Also, of the 118 trials in which the primary endpoint involved mortality: 32 (27%) used disease-specific mortality rather than all-cause mortality. Thus we do not the cause of death of many patients who died during the trials, whether they were disease related or not.
These data manipulations were found to be more common in drug industry sponsored trials. 
Trials which were exclusively industry sponsored were 16% more likely to use surrogate endpoints than trials which had mixed funding or non-industry funding.
Industry funded trials were also 23% more likely to only report disease specific mortality endpoints.

STAGE 4: Ghostwriting Articles


Problem: Ghostwriting.  When you don’t know who wrote an article you cannot judge the content by the author’s expertise or ethics.

Example: From 1999-2001, 96 journal articles were published about sertraline (Zoloft). Over half of the articles were prepared by one medical writing agency named Current Medical Directions. Their 55 articles were all positive in their portrayal of Zoloft, and only 2 of them acknowledged writing support from people not listed as authors.  Who analyzed the data?  Who wrote the bulk of the text?  Who made the conclusions? We don’t know.  These potentially ghost-written articles were published in well-respected journals such as JAMA (Journal of the American Medical Association), JAACAP (Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry), and Archives of Family Medicine.  The articles written by CMD had, on average, a higher impact factor as well as higher citation rates than the other 41 articles. 

Problem: Articles are often prepared based on a researcher’s study, and then sent to the researcher for their approval, listing the researcher as the author. 

Example: Dr. David Healy had performed research on anti-depressants.  He received an email from a drug company representative stating “In order to reduce your workload to a minimum, we have had our ghostwriter produce a first draft based on your published work. I attach it here.”
The article listed Dr. Healy as the sole author, yet he hadn’t written a single word.  He did not agree with their “glowing review of the drug” and he suggested some changes.  The drug company replied stating that he had missed some 'commercially important' points. The ghostwritten paper was later published in a psychiatric journal in its original form - under another doctor's name.


STAGE 5: Publication Bias/Omitted Information


Problem:  Critical information is often not published.

Example: When research misconduct occurs, it is not mentioned in journal articles based on those flawed studies.
Every year, the FDA inspects several hundred clinical sites performing biomedical research on human subjects. When they find evidence of research misconduct, they publish it in a report on their website. From 1998-2013, the FDA identified 57 clinical trials with serious problems including falsification of data, protocol violations,  and failure to protect the safety of patients.
Those 57 Trials led to 78 Publications.  Only 3/78 publications (4%) mentioned the objectionable conditions or practices found during the inspection.  No corrections, retractions, expressions of concern, or other comments acknowledging the key issues identified by the inspection were subsequently published.

Problem: If a study’s results are unfavorable to a new drug, they are often not published, leading to a publication bias in favor of the new medication.

Example: A search for all studies performed on 12 antidepressants found 74 trials registered with the FDA.  37 trials showed positive results for the antidepressant and all but one of them were published.  One trial had neutral results.  The other 36 studies showed negative or questionable results from the antidepressants.  22 of them were not published, 11 were published in such a way as to make the outcome appear positive, and only 3 were published showing the negative results.
Only Published Trials

Thus, in the published literature, 94% of antidepressant trials showed positive results.  By contrast, FDA analysis of all antidepressant trials showed that only 51% were positive.  It should also be noted that 3,449 study participants never had their data published.



 Including Unpublished Trials

     

STAGE 6: Journal Reprints


Problem: Medical Journals can earn higher profits if they publish pharmaceutical industry sponsored papers.  This gives an incentive to give those papers preferential treatment.

Example: Medical Journals make money of journal publications and reprints.  Journals which publish a study funded by the pharmaceutical industry have higher numbers of reprints ordered.
In a study looking at reprint orders, Papers funded by the pharmaceutical industry were more likely to have reprints ordered than were control papers (odds ratio of 8.64.)  Even if a study was only partially funded by pharmaceutical companies it was still more likely to be re-ordered, (odds ratio of 3.72).
This matters because there is substantial money to be made off reprints.
In a study of income from reprints, it was found that The BMJ made £12 ,458 on average for a reprint order.  Lancet earned £287,353 per reprint order.11

STAGE 7: Advertisements in Journals


Problem: Drug advertisements in Medical Journals are often misleading or inaccurate.
Example: In 1992, Annals of Internal Medicine examined the accuracy of advertisements in 10 medical journals.  They found 109 full page pharmaceutical advertisements. The ad and the cited source were sent to three reviewers, (2 physicians in the field and a clinical pharmacist).  They concluded that 34% of advertisements required major revisions and 28% should not have been published.
Example: A 2003 study published in Lancet analyzed all advertisements for anti-hypertensives or lipid lowering agents in 6 medical journals for a period of one year.   Out of 287 advertisements, only 125 listed at least one reference.  18% of those references could not be found.  44% of the references did not support the statement in the advertisement.

DISCUSSION


"Medical journals are an extension of the marketing arm of the pharmaceutical companies" according to Richard Smith who worked for 13 years as editor of The BMJ (British Medical Journal).

The deeper we dig the more evident it becomes that our medical literature is not as pure or objective as we might wish to believe.  Often our journals are just another form of advertising.  This is not limited to journals with small circulation numbers or case reports only.  The most well respected journals with the highest circulation including NEJM, JAMA, BMJ, Lancet, and others have all suffered bias from pharmaceutical companies.

The potential for bias is evident from the very beginning of the process.  From the initial design of drug trials, contractual agreements ensure that the results will be owned and analyzed only by the sponsoring company.  While they must register the trial with the FDA, they are under no obligation to publish the results of their study.  Papers can be written by anyone.  Ghostwriters are commonly employed by pharmaceutical companies to prepare positive papers which will then be published under a researcher’s name.  While this may have some valid benefits, such as freeing up time for the researcher to continue his/her work, it is disingenuous.  The data are only as good as the person analyzing and explaining them.  If we don’t know the true credentials of the author, nor their financial interests, how can we judge the validity of their findings?

The same is true of journal editors.  How can we judge the contents of a journal when there is financial incentive to publish pharmaceutical sponsored papers.

Pharmaceutical companies can do excellent, valid research and bring good medications to the market. Authors can be trustworthy, journal editors can be ethical and discerning, advertisements can be accurate.

However, often these things don’t occur.  Physicians and hospitals spend thousands of dollars subscribing to medical journals.  A subscription to one database of medical literature can cost up to $500 per year. 

Patients are told by advertisements to “Ask your doctor.”  When they do, they are seeking their physicians informed, educated opinion.  Is that opinion based on evidence and fact?  Or is it based on a paper that was published for financial gain, after being ghostwritten by an unknown author, based on a study which was analyzed to skew results, from data which are proprietary and cannot be re-examined, with a protocol that was altered or not followed in the first place.

Physicians are required to give all patients “informed consent.”  If the data are that suspect, is there really any such thing?

 - written by Matt Larsen D.O. (References to all studies and quotes are available)

Monday, February 23, 2015

Book Review: Deadly Medicines and Organized Crime


Grade: A

Mind Blown! I mean it.  I've been skeptical of the pharmaceutical industry for many years, but I don't know of anything as impressive as this book.
This book is not written by some anti-drug hack.  Dr. Peter Gotzsche co-founded the Cochrane Collaboration in 1993 and established The Nordic Cochrane Centre the same year.
I first heard about the Cochrane Collaboration in my high school debate class when my teacher was discussing the greatest collection and analyses of medical knowledge in the world.
Yeah - the author of this book helped found it and he has worked in medical research and meta-analysis of data for most of his life.  He became Professor of Clinical Research Design and Analysis in 2010 at the University of Copenhagen.
Basically - this guy knows what he is talking about. He is a physician who has prescribed medications, he has been a "drug rep" and helped sell medications, and he has since analyzed more studies than any researcher I've read.
The only reason this book doesn't get an A+ is because it is so amazingly heavy on research and medical terminology that it is unlikely to be read by the general public.

This book meticulously and methodically shows how deeply entrenched the pharmaceutical industry is in EVERY level of medicine.
I knew they offered free lunches, free drug samples, and they paid for speakers at medical conferences.  I knew they used to give out free pens and paper, and toys, and clocks.  I even knew they had some pull at the FDA.  I had no idea about all the rest.
MEDICAL JOURNALS
This was the part that scared me the most. 
The BMJ (British Medical Journal)'s former editor said "medical journals are an extension of the marketing arm of the pharmaceutical companies." - p. 64
WHAT?!  Medical journals are where I get my trustworthy information.  It's where I can find double blind randomized control trials that have been peer-reviewed.  They are the gold standard for research!
Journals are where I proudly hang my hat.  I don't need to listen to drug reps - I read the New England Journal of Medicine.  The best in the world!

It turns out journal editors can be bought off - just like everyone else.  Even the best medical journals in the world - New England Journal of Medicine, Lancet, BMJ, Annals of Internal Medicine and JAMA - have all accepted drug money to publish misleading information or bad studies.
The New England Journal of Medicine (likely the most respected medical journal in the world) is as guilty as the rest.  32% of all trials published in their journal were solely funded by drug companies.
NEJM even changed their policy in 2002 to allow authors to write about products in which they had a financial interest.
Journals make HUGE money from advertisements and reprints.  If they publish a study beneficial to a drug company - that company promises to buy reprints in order to show them to physicians.
The Lancet made over £1.5 million on orders for a reprint of just one of their editions.  - p. 65
The Annals of Internal Medicine lost over $1 million in advertising revenue after it published a study that was critical of industry advertisements. - p. 65
Journals have a financial interest in making their article abstracts sound beneficial for new drugs.  Reprints will be ordered.  The more they allow a study to minimize or hide side effects - the more money they'll make.
Journal corruption is just one small chapter in this book.  Gotzsche also details corruption in clinical trials, seeding trials, TV ads, the FDA, patents, professional organizations, and even CME (Continuing Medical Education.)

Doctors have to stay current.  To keep our board certification we have to log hours of continuing education.
60% of all CME is paid for and provided by drug companies - so guess what most of us are learning?  Exactly what they want us to.
Drug companies are not changing.  They get caught in their fraud and they either say it was "one bad apple" or "mea culpa: we've now changed our ways."
It's all lies.
If you look at the 3 years span from 2010-2012 you'll find these cases:
 

2012: Abbott paid $1.5 Billion for Medicaid fraud

2012: Johnson and Johnson fined $1.1 Billion for hiding side effects
2011: GlaxoSmithKline paid $3 Billion for illegal marketing of off-label drugs.
2010: AstraZeneca paid $520 Million for fraud
2010: Novartis paid $423 Million for illegal marketing
the list goes on...


They aren't changing.  Drug companies know how to make money - and these lawsuits are already factored in to the profit predictions.  They know that these fines are worth it.  The fraud makes them more money than they will ever be fined.

This book made me look at my life.  I'll graduate from fellowship in four months and begin my career as a Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist.

I know there are good medications.  There are caring doctors.  There are honest people working as drug reps.  There are intelligent and ethical researchers at the FDA and at pharmaceutical companies.  There are honest, discerning journal editors who want to publish the truth.

I simply don't trust drug companies to give any of these people accurate information.

Peter Gotzsche's book is heart-breakingly accurate.  I highly recommend it.

(Because of this book, I have started a facebook group for prescribers called "Doctors Without Sponsors" to help increase awareness and encourage others to decrease their reliance on drug companies' information and money.  I also recommend signing this pledge: http://noadvertisingplease.org/sign/)

Monday, September 15, 2014

Who Lies More: Big Pharma or Big Natura?


There is big trouble with the laws concerning Natural Supplements:

Everyone knows there is no research required to show they work - but the scary part is that you don't even have to prove they're safe.

You have no idea if what is in them is good, bad, safe, dangerous, passed to a baby in-utero through the placenta, secreted in breast milk, cleared through the kidneys or the liver.  You don't know if it thins the blood, reacts with medications, or anything else.

The part that drives me insane is what every single one says when it comes to safety: "Ask your physician"

HOW AM I SUPPOSED TO KNOW?!?!  There is NO data.  I can search pubmed and google scholar and cochrane and every other database - and find nothing.

Don't get me wrong - there are GREAT natural medicines out there.  I posted about seven that help mental illness at this link a few years ago.

The problem is that until a supplement causes enough deaths, it never gets researched.  Or if it is researched, the results don't have to be reported. 

Ephedra was a great natural supplement... till it killed people.  Then the FDA found out Metabolife had been doing research and already had reports of over 15,000 ephedra-related adverse events, ranging from insomnia to death.  Yes.  A Supplement Company was hiding research, letting people die so they could make more money.


But I thought Big Pharma was the bad guy?

There are plenty of demons in the pharmaceutical industry.  There are plenty of demons in EVERY industry. 
But at least Big Pharma has to work really really hard to hide it because of all the oversight laws.  "Big Natura" doesn't have to work hard at all - because no one is looking.   The FDA can't look into them - Congress made sure of that.

So you have to ask yourself:

Who should you fear more - Big Pharma or Big Natura?