SSRIs can give you digestive problems… and make you MORE depressed

Another hat-tip to the Truthman for this story from the Daily Mail.

As I’ve said before, the truth is slowly drip, drip, dripping out – one day I’m sure my children will be appalled that so many prescriptions were written for drugs like Seroxat that turned out to be so harmful to so many patients, much like the Thalidomide and Benzo scandals of the past.

What compounds matters for me is the role of the drug companies, like GlaxoSmithKline, that continued to aggressively market Seroxat, even when company insiders knew the drug was defective, dangerous and ineffective.

There was money  to be made and GSK wasn’t going let anything like negative trial results get in the way of profit. Especially not when Key Opinion Leaders could be relied on to say whatever a drug company told them to say – providing the KOLs were paid enough.

Anyway, I’ll get off my soapbox now and let you read the article from the Daily Mail:

Depression levels in Britain continue to spiral.

Last year alone, more than 43 million prescriptions for antidepressants were handed out — 25 per cent more than three years before.

But are antidepressants the panacea we hope them to be?

Drugs such as Prozac [and Seroxat] were hailed in the early Nineties as wonder pills that would banish depressive blues for good.

But in the past five years, growing scientific evidence has shown these drugs work for only a minority of people.

And now controversial research in a respected journal claims that these antidepressants can make many patients’ depression worse.

This alarming suggestion centres on the very chemical that is targeted by antidepressants — serotonin.

Drugs such as Prozac [and Seroxat] are known as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (or SSRIs).

Their aim is to boost the level of this ‘feel-good’ chemical in the brain.

But the new research, published in the journal Frontiers In Evolutionary Psychology, points out that serotonin is like a chemical Swiss Army knife, performing a very wide range of jobs in the brain and body.

And when we start deliberately altering serotonin levels, it may cause a wide range of unwanted effects.

These can include digestive problems, sexual difficulties and even strokes and premature deaths in older people, according to the study’s lead researcher Paul Andrews. 

‘We need to be much more cautious about the widespread use of these drugs,’ says Andrews, an assistant professor of evolutionary psychology at McMaster University in Ontario, Canada.

Previous research has suggested that the drugs provide little benefit for most people with mild and moderate depression, and actively help only a few of the most severely depressed.

Eminent psychologist Irving Kirsch has found that for many patients, SSRIs are no more effective than a placebo pill.

Two years ago, the Canadian Medical Association Journal reported a 68 per cent increase in risk of miscarriage in women on antidepressants.

Drugs such as Prozac [and Seroxat] are known as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (or SSRIs). Their aim is to boost the level of this ‘feel-good’ chemical in the brain

And research in 2009 on Danish children found a small, but significant, increase in the risk of heart defects among babies whose mothers had used SSRIs in early pregnancy.

There is also growing evidence that long-term use in adults is linked to bleeding in the gut and increased risk of stroke.

The key to understanding these side-effects is serotonin, says Andrews. Serotonin is also the reason why patients can often end up feeling still more depressed after they have finished a course of SSRI drugs.

He argues that SSRI antidepressants interfere with the brain, leaving the patient vulnerable to a ‘rebound’ depression of even greater intensity than before.

‘After prolonged use [when a patient stops taking SSRIs], the brain compensates by lowering its levels of serotonin production,’ he says, adding that it also changes the way receptors in the brain respond to serotonin, making the brain less sensitive to the chemical.

These changes are believed to be temporary, but studies indicate that the effects may linger for up to two years.

Relapsing is not exclusive to SSRI drugs — it is, in fact, seen in all the classes of antidepressant medications — but Andrews believes that the risk is particularly strong with SSRI drugs.

Moreover, he warns that antidepressants can disrupt all the physical processes that are normally regulated by serotonin, adding that animal studies show only about 5  per cent of the body’s serotonin resides in the brain. Most is housed in the gut.

It is used, among other things, to control digestion, form blood clots at wound sites, and regulate reproduction and growth.

So a drug that interferes with serotonin may cause developmental problems in infants, problems with sexual stimulation and sperm development in adults, digestive problems such as constipation, diarrhoea, indigestion and bloating, and abnormal bleeding and stroke in the elderly.

The drugs may also raise the risk of dementia.

Most disturbingly of all, Andrews’ review features three recent studies which, he says, show that elderly antidepressant users are more likely to die prematurely than non-users, even  after taking other important variables into account.

One study, published in the British Medical Journal last year, found patients given SSRIs were more than 4 per cent more likely to die in the next year than those not on the drugs.

‘Serotonin is an ancient chemical,’ says Andrews.

‘It is intimately regulating  many different processes, and when you interfere with these things, you can expect that it is going to cause some harm.’

Stafford Lightman, professor of medicine at the University of Bristol, and a leading UK expert in brain chemicals and hormones, says Andrews’ review highlights some important problems, yet it should also be taken with a pinch of salt.

‘This report is doing the opposite of what drug companies do,’ he says.

‘While drug companies selectively present all the positives in their research, this selectively presents all the negatives that can be found.

Both approaches are simplistic. And while SSRIs might possibly cause rebound depression, it is also sadly natural to expect that people with severe depression will see their illness come back, and often in a worse state.

‘Nevertheless, the study is useful in that it is always worth pointing out that there is a downside to any medicine.’

Professor Lightman adds that there is still a great deal we don’t know about SSRIs — not least what they actually do in our brains.

‘It’s a bit embarrassing, but the bottom line is that we don’t really know how they work,’ he says.

‘Basically, we started using these drugs before we understood what they do, because they showed some effectiveness.’

When it comes to understanding why the drugs work only for a limited proportion of patients, U.S. scientists think they might now have the answer.

They think that in many clinically depressed patients, it’s not only the lack of feel-good serotonin causing their depression, but also a failure in the area of the brain that produces new cells throughout our lives.

This area, the hippocampus, is also responsible for regulating mood and memory. Research suggests that in patients whose hippocampus has lost the ability to produce new cells, SSRIs do not bring any benefit.

But why the hippocampus should do this — and how it should be treated — is not clear.

And even if those answers were found, they might still not produce a cure for many cases of depression, because the condition varies so widely in its causes and is so little understood.

What should be sure is that the days of doctors habitually prescribing SSRIs to all and sundry on the basis that they might work, and won’t do any harm anyway, really should be behind us.

Paxil researcher falsified clinical trial data – gets 13 months in jail

Isn’t it always the way – the little fish get caught but somehow the big fish get away.

Key opinion leaders (KOLs) whose reputations are for sale can be relied on to say whatever a drug company tells them to, providing they are paid enough. The big fish I mean are ‘doctors’ such as Nemeroff and Keller in the USA and Montgomery in the UK. And the entire board of GlaxoSmithKline. Why no jail time for these people?

This is the way drug companies go about their business. They are happy to manipulate trial data to suit their own ends (while hiding the negative data) then they buy KOLs to talk up what can only be described as dangerous drugs.

Then they set aside billions of dollars in their accounts for the payment of fines and out of court settlements, and I, for one, am convinced they simply see this as just another part of the marketing cost of a new drug.

As long as the drug companies make more money than they pay out in fines (and they do, by a LONG way) then that’s good business – patients don’t come into the equation.

This story from Lawyers and Settlements:

GlaxoSmithKline is the subject of more bad publicity after a researcher was allegedly found to have falsified data in trials about Paxil. Meanwhile, the drug maker faces lawsuits alleging newborns suffered Paxil Birth defects when they were exposed to Paxil prior to birth.

The psychiatrist who reportedly falsified clinical data, Dr. Maria Carmen Palazzo, was a clinical investigator on studies conducted by SmithKline Beecham (doing business as GlaxoSmithKline). According to CNBC on 8/20/10, Palazzo has now pleaded guilty to 15 counts of failing to prepare and maintain records with the intent to defraud and mislead.

Palazzo reportedly included children in a study that involved diagnoses the children did not have. Prosecutors claimed that Palazzo also reported symptoms that her study subjects did not exhibit. She was sentenced to 13 months in prison, which she is serving at the same time as an 87-month term for healthcare fraud.

According to BNET (08/19/10), Palazzo was charged after the Federal Drug Administration (FDA) accused her of enrolling children in studies of obsessive-compulsive disorder and major depressive disorder even though the children she studied did not have the proper diagnosis for inclusion in the study.

Paxil now carries a black box warning about the risk of suicide in children. It also carries a warning about the risk of birth defects in babies exposed to the antidepressant prior to birth.

Lawsuits filed against GlaxoSmithKline allege the company did not adequately warn patients about the risk of birth defects, resulting in babies being born with serious health problems, including heart defects and persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn (PPHN).

GlaxoSmithKline reportedly settled a number of Paxil birth defect lawsuits, although the financial terms of the settlement were not disclosed. In announcing the settlement, the drug company said via e-mail that it “has reached agreement to settle certain cases involving the use of Paxil during pregnancy. The details of those settlements are confidential. Other cases remain pending.”

It is currently not known how many cases were settled, for what amounts or how many cases are pending. Bloomberg reported on 7/20/10 that Paxil agreed to pay more than $1 billion to settle more than 800 lawsuits that alleged Paxil was responsible for birth defects. Bloomberg further noted that the settlement works out to approximately $1.2 million to families and leaves around 100 lawsuits pending.

Remember, Glaxo has a track record of hiding negative clinical trial data that would knock sales of its drugs – the story of Seroxat and Study 329 is truly shocking.

Read more about Seroxat here:
More on Paxil and suicide – “Glaxo was aware of this risk, and hid it”

and here:
Glaxo fails in its responsibility to patients and it hid Seroxat data – it’s official

And what happens in the UK when the MHRA  undertakes a criminal investigation into Glaxo and the withholding of clinical trial data?… and finds Glaxo guilty…?

The answer is nothing happened to Glaxo – nothing at all.

The Doctors on Glaxo’s payroll – here are all the details!

This from Evelyn Pringle:

Glaxo Birth Defect Litigation Reveals Paxil Promoters on Speed Dial

In the first Paxil birth defect trial against GlaxoSmithKline, much of evidence focused on the doctors on Glaxo’s payroll involved in the corruption of the medical literature and seminars given to promote the off label use of Paxil with pregnant and nursing mothers.

On October 13, 2009, the trial of Kilker v Glaxo ended with a Philadelphia jury awarding $2.5 million in compensatory damages to the family of Lyam Kilker, after finding that Glaxo “negligently failed to warn” the doctor treating Lyam’s mother about the risks of Paxil and the drug was a “factual cause” of the child’s heart defects.

Glaxo’s lead attorney at trial was King & Spalding partner Chilton Varner, and the family’s lead attorney was Sean Tracey from Houston.

During his opening statement on September 15, 2009, Tracey told the jury that Doctor David Healy is “one of the most, if not the (most) world-recognized expert on pharmaceutical industry influence and the medicine, he is up there in the top five.”

Healy “is going to explain to you how GSK corrupted the medical literature,” he said, “how they used their money and influence to have doctors that they paid put out literature into the world so doctors … could read literature that looked like literature, looked like science, smelled like science, appeared to be science, from very important people, people that were on boards, people that were professors, people that published hundreds of articles.”

Healy is going to explain to you that what they didn’t tell people … “is, we are paying these doctors to do all these things,” Tracey told the jury.

“There is a book, it looks like a telephone book,” he said, “of names of doctors, influential doctors, on their payroll, the names of these doctors you will see on this literature that looks and smells like science.”

“And just coincidentally, this science that they are going to parade before you, all seemed to help them,” he told the jury. “Some of this happened in the last couple weeks before this trial started.”
Advisory Panels and KOLs

While testifying, Tracey had Healy explain the concept of key opinion leaders (KOLs) and drug company advisory boards. “When a pharmaceutical company is bringing a drug to market,” Healy said, “a few years before they bring the drug to the market they look at the academic physicians in the field and work out who will be the key people who will be the advocates for the drug.”

“They recruit advisory panels for the drug, which will be senior figures within the field who they believe they will be able to depend on to persuade the rest of their colleagues to think seriously about using this drug,” he noted.

In explaining a “national” advisory board, Healy said, when “a drug comes to market, they will have a range of senior people in the field, it could be 10 or 12 different people from different parts of the country whom they think are going to be the most influential in helping to get their drug moving within the market here in the U.S. or the U.K.”

“Then there is a further group of people down below,” Healy said, “who are called the key opinion leaders or KOL for short.”

“These, again, are fairly senior doctors,” he told the jury. “These are the people whom it is thought will go out and give lectures on the drug to the doctors who are actually doing most of the prescribing of the drug.”

In the early 1990s, Healy was on a Paxil advisory board around the time the drug was launched in the UK. People who did not think Paxil was a great product would usually be dropped from the advisory panel, he told the jury.

In fact, Tracey produced a Glaxo memo that stated: “if after this meeting anyone on the advisory board who doesn’t passionately believe Paxil’s uniqueness for anxiety should quietly be replaced.”

Naming Names

During the trial, Tracey wanted Healy to specifically testify about Doctors, Charles Nemeroff and Zachery Stowe, and apparently Glaxo did not want the jury to hear the sordid tale because their attorneys strongly objected.

On September 16, Tracy argued his case to the judge in chambers outside the hearing of the jury. “Doctor Nemeroff is generally considered, or was before his fall from grace, the most powerful man in psychiatry in the United States,” Tracey told the judge.

“Doctor Healy is uniquely qualified to talk about Doctor Nemeroff’s role in the corruption of medical literature related specifically to Paxil as orchestrated by GSK and Doctor Nemeroff,” he argued. “Same with Doctor Stowe,” Tracey said. “Doctor Stowe specifically carried out a campaign to market through GSK or GSK through Doctor Stowe to pregnant women and women of childbearing age.” “I need to show the jury that an enormous amount of money changed hands between Stowe and Nemeroff and others,” he said, “and that all of these doctors were on GSK’s Paxil advisory board.”

“It goes to the credibility of these doctors,” Tracey pointed out. “These are the doctors that are writing the literature that is out there in the peer-reviewed literature that doctors are relying on,” he told the judge.

These doctors were required ethically “by their universities to disclose to the Federal Government how much money GSK was paying them,” Tracey said. “They did not do that.”

He also wanted the jury to know that “Emory University has actually stripped Doctor Nemeroff of his chair over this very issue of failing to disclose payments from GSK,” he told the judge.
Tracey wanted to prove these allegations with testimony from Healy about Senator Charles Grassley’s investigation of Nemeroff and Stowe and the results that were made public. In the end, the judge refused to allow Healy to testify about the amounts Nemeroff and Stowe were paid by Glaxo, why Nemeroff lost the chairmanship, or the disciplining of Stowe.

“Whether or not Emory had a battle with them about disclosure is not relevant in my mind,”the judge told Tracey. “What is relevant is that they were prominent individuals who wrote in favor of this drug, that they were on the advisory board, that they received honorariums of money, and that he believes in his opinion that these articles are wrong that they wrote.” “He can offer his opinion that they were wrong and why they were wrong,” he said. “I am going to keep out the argument about the doctors being sanctioned for failing to disclose.”
Nemeroff’s “credibility from Emory would involve a mini trial of the issue with Emory and him,” the judge said.

The Emory investigation, in fact, found Nemeroff was paid more than $960,000 by Glaxo, from 2000 through 2006, but listed less than $35,000 on his disclosure forms. All totaled, he had earnings of $2.8 million from speaking and consulting arrangements with drug companies between 2000 and 2007, but failed to disclose at least $1.2 million, according to Senate Finance Committee reports.
In 2008, Stowe was the primary investigator for a National Institutes of Health grant where the stated purpose was “to stimulate vigorous debate with the emphasis on the reproductive safety of antidepressant medications,” according to a June 2, 2009 letter to the president of Emory from Grassley.

Glaxo paid Stowe $154,400 for fifty-seven promotional talks in 2007. He also received $99,300 from Glaxo in the first ten months of 2008 for thirty-eight talks for antidepressants, according to Grassley.
During a deposition, Stowe testified that around “80% of his Emory salary ($187,000) comes from his NIH grants,” the letter notes. His total Emory salary was $232,000.
In a June 11, 2008 statement on the Senate Floor, in describing his investigation, Grassley said, “I have been looking at how drug companies try and influence medical care in America. Companies can do this by, for example, creating studies favorable to their drugs, by hiring doctors to promote their products, and in some cases even intimidating critics of their drugs.”

On this date, Grassley was announcing his investigation of Glaxo regarding revelations in reports filed in Paxil suicide litigation by Dr Joseph Glenmullen, showing the company had manipulated the numbers on adverse events related to suicidality in clinical trials all the way back in 1989, before the drug was FDA approved, to make it appear that Paxil did not increase the risk of suicidal behavior when, in fact, trial subjects on Paxil were eight times more likely to attempt or commit suicide than patients taking a placebo.

“So what did GlaxoSmithKline do with these reports?” Grassley said. “Well, the company tried to hide them.”

“They went to the judge and asked to have Dr. Glenmullen’s report and all the confirming documents placed under seal-that means that no member of the public could see them,” he said. “In fact, Glaxo has been doing everything possible to ensure that this information remains under court seal.”
“It seems to me that GlaxoSmithKline tried to hide these reports because they seem to demonstrate what the company knew-that Paxil was associated with an increased risk of suicide based on the company’s own studies,” Grassley noted.

“Essentially, it looks like GlaxoSmithKline bamboozled the FDA,” he pointed out.

For easy reference, psychiatric academics identified by Grassley’s investigation to date, as not fully disclosing money from drug companies, include Joseph Biederman, Thomas Spencer and Timothy Wilens at Harvard, Charles Nemeroff and Zackery Stowe from Emory; Melissa DelBello at the University of Cincinnati; Alan Schatzberg, president of the American Psychiatric Association, from Stanford; Martin Keller at Brown University; Karen Wagner and A John Rush from the University of Texas; and Fred Goodwin, the former host of the radio show, “Infinite Minds,” broadcast for years by National Pubic Radio, before it was thrown off the air.

Paxil All-Star Team

During direct examination of Healy, Tracey introduced an exhibit on a 2002 forum called, “Perspectives on Psychiatry for the Future, Summary of Program Evaluations,” along with a list of doctors who gave presentations.
“What I would like to do is use this document to prove that these are a list of doctors that are out promoting Paxil for the defendant, and to have Dr. Healy explain, as he has published, how GSK sought to change the culture of how doctors view Paroxetine and pregnancy,” he told the judge.
Tracey went through several of the presentations and named off doctors that included Daniel Christensen, Zachary Stowe, Philip Perera, Dean Hamer, Dwight Evans, Karen Wagner, Katherine Beebe, and Prakash Masand.

Healy said he believed that most of the doctors mentioned were on the Paxil speaking team.
Zachary Stowe was listed for a presentation on the topic of, “Use of Antidepressants in Pregnant and Breastfeeding Women.”

Page 10 of the document asked: “As a result of the program, what changes, if any, will you make in your practice?” Healy testified that after talks at this type of program, the audience will be asked to rate the points that are made. Tracey read some of the comments made by doctors attending the seminar, which included: “Possibly less fearful of treating pregnant women,” “Increased comfort in treating pregnant women,” “Increase use of Paxil – Will reassess the use or nonuse of SSRIs in pregnant/lactating clients,” and “More aggressive in treatment of special population, children and pregnant women.”

Healy testified that this document supported his opinion that Glaxo did influence doctors’ prescribing practices with respect to Paxil and pregnancy and “they were quite successful at this.”
“I don’t think you can find a single comment which says, I will be more cautious about treating pregnant women with Paxil,” he pointed out.

The jury was also shown a “Protocol” where Stowe had applied to Glaxo for funds to do research on the issue of Paxil in breast milk. Under the objectives for performing the study, there were five possible boxes to check, and Glaxo checked the box for “image enhancement.”
Healy knew of no article that ever appeared in peer-reviewed literature or was published in a reputable journal where the author said the purpose of the study was image enhancement. The odds of getting a paper published in a leading journal “would be remote to nonexistent,” if you told the journal that the reason for the study was to enhance the image of the drug, he said.
Tracey then introduced a January 10, 2000 email from Jillian, at the Cohn and Wolfe PR firm, to Scott Sproull and others at Glaxo, that showed Stowe was going on a publicity tour and would issue a press release for the Paxil breast milk study on Emory letterhead to lend credibility to the study in the media.
The email stated: “Scott, please review the attached press release and forward me any comments or edits.”

“As you may know,” Jillian said, “Dr. Stowe is on board for publicity efforts and Sherrie and I are coordinating time to meet with him next week to arm him with key messages for this announcement, which is slated for February.” “We are sending the release for his review at the same time in efforts to secure distribution on Emory letterhead,” the email said, “as you know would provide further credibility to data for media.”

Healy had never hired PR firms to disseminate his published literature or lent his name to go on publicity tours for drug companies, he told the jury.
Tracy presented another protocol for a Paxil study, with Stowe as the investigator, where the objective checked was again “image enhancement.” As a scientist looking at the design of this protocol, Healy said, “this appears to be part of the positioning of Paxil as a drug that will be favorable to women of childbearing years.”

The budget for the study showed that Glaxo would pay $600 for each patient enrolled and the cost would be about $9,000.

Prior to 2005, Healy testified, he was not aware that Glaxo “spent any money to actually determine if the drug could be causing birth defects in human children.”
Tracey produced another document from a September seminar held in Philadelphia, at which Kimberly Yonkers was speaking to a Women’s Health Advisory Board. Healy said Yonkers was a professor of psychiatry from Yale University and she was on Glaxo’s Women’s Health Advisory Board.
He told the jury that Yonkers was particularly influential “from the point of view of issues to do with women’s mental health.”

Glaxo’s Speed Dial

During the trial, Tracey wanted to use an exhibit that he referred to as a “telephone book,” full of influential doctors on Glaxo’s speakers’ bureau for Paxil and have Healy go through some of the names.
“What I would like to do is put it into the record and have him identify who these people are,” Tracey explained to the judge in chambers, outside the hearing of the jury.
“Many of them are influential psychiatrists who have published on Paxil,” he said. “I want him to go through seven or eight names so later when the jury hears literature by these authors they will be able to put it into context.” What I am going to do “is show the jury how all-encompassing their strategy for identifying and cultivating psychiatrists were in the country,” Tracey said.
“That’s part of Doctor Healy’s opinion,” he said, “how they identified these hundreds of doctors across the country to change the culture that existed.”

While Healy was testifying, Tracey introduced the 171 page list and had Healy identify some of the doctors.

Healy testified that Lori Altshuler is “a figure who is very well known in the field of women’s mental health and would have written some key articles on the idea that it may be appropriate to use antidepressant drugs for women who are pregnant.”

He identified Vivian Burt as “a person who is a fairly big name in the women’s mental health field and, again, a person who is an advocate for using antidepressants in women of childbearing years, and in particular, has talked regularly about the use of Paxil for women of childbearing years.”
He said Lee Cohen had been on the Paxil advisory board. “Dr. Cohen wrote an article that has since become quite famous,” he told the jury. “It became famous not because of the contents of the article, but because Dr. Cohen and co-authors, most of whom are on this list, failed to disclose the links to GSK or the other companies in the field that they had.”

Some of Cohen’s co-authors on this study titled, “Relapse of Major Depression During Pregnancy in Women Who Maintain or Discontinue Antidepressant Treatment,” included Lori Atshuler, Vivian Burt, Jeffrey Newport, Zachary Stowe, and Aadele Viguera.

On July 11, 2006, with the headline, “Financial Ties to Industry Cloud Major Depression Study,” the Wall Street Journal reported that, “the study and resulting television and newspaper reports of the research failed to note that most of the 13 authors are paid as consultants or lecturers by the makers of antidepressants,” and “the authors failed to disclose more than 60 different financial relationships with drug companies.”

Most of the authors, the Journal said, were psychiatrists at Harvard’s Massachusetts General Hospital, Emory University, and the University of California Los Angeles.
The Journal noted that Cohen was a longtime consultant to three antidepressant makers, a paid speaker for seven, and had research funded by four drug companies. Adele Viguera, associate director of the Mass General perinatal psychiatry program and professor at Harvard, failed to disclose a paid speaking relationship with Glaxo.

Lori Altshuler, director of the Mood Disorders Research Program at University of California Los Angeles, failed to disclose that she was a speaker or consultant for at least five antidepressant makers. “Two of her colleagues — Vivien Burt and Victoria Hendrick — were also authors who didn’t report financial relationships they have with antidepressant makers,” the Journal reported.

In an expert witness report for the Novak Paxil birth defect case, Dr Dee Mangin points out that: “The Cohen study was not a controlled study, used a highly selected population likely to have a high relapse rate and not representative of a primary care patient population.”

“In addition,” she said, “it is not clear that subjects had a tapered withdrawal, which would increase the likelihood of misclassification of withdrawal symptoms as relapse.”
Mangin reports that in the year the study was published, one KOL (with the name redacted), received $72,000 from Glaxo in the first 6 months of 2006 alone, for giving 28 talks, which works out to $2,880 per talk.

The next name on the list read to the jury was Katherine Wisner, “a figure who has published quite extensively on the issue of it being often quite good to treat women of childbearing years and even women who are actually pregnant with antidepressants,” Healy said.

“She puts forward the point of view that it may be more harmful to leave the condition untreated,” he told the jury. Charles Nemeroff’s name was on page 110. “He was probably the leading figure in the field or the leading person on this list,” Healy said. Zachary Stowe was on page 151, and last name read was Kimberly Yonkers. Healy called her “extremely influential.”

Convenient Report Appears

During cross-examination, Varner asked Healy about a report that was co-published in the journals, Obstetrics and Gynecology and General Hospital Psychiatry, in September 2009, the very month that the first Paxil birth defect trial was scheduled to start, which she claimed was a joint statement from the American Psychiatric Association and the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology. The report was titled, “The Management of Depression During Pregnancy.”

“The purpose of this deliberation,” Varner said to Healy, “was to come up with a statement from those two organizations that would assist prescribers in making their decisions about how to treat depression in pregnant women, correct?” “We do not know that this was endorsed by APA,” Healy said. “We don’t know if it was endorsed by ACOG.” “We don’t know whether it was a collection of individuals who just got together and because they belonged to both APA and ACOG, thought that they could put this kind of title on the piece,” he told the jury.

“It’s correct, is it not,” Varner asked Healy, “that ACOG and APA describe some of the risks that were found (with SSRIs) that were, quote, extremely small and not replicated by other studies?”

“It’s not correct to say that at all,” Healy said. “APA and ACOG have not said this.”

“What you got is a number of authors here who are linked to either APA or ACOG who have said this,” he told Varner. “The reason that I make this point is I have been party to processes like this on behalf of the British Association for Psychopharmacology and I can tell you exactly, if you want, how statements like this arise.”

“I’m not asking that,” Varner stated, cutting Healy off.

In fact, during the trial, the jury saw a January 2009 paper published in the ACOG Journal, by authors from Yale, in which Paxil was number two on a list of commonly prescribed “teratogenic” drugs.
It should also be noted that in 2006, about 30% of the American Psychiatric Association’s $62.5 million in financing, came from the pharmaceutical industry, which means the group received close to $19 million from drug companies in 2006 alone.

During Healy’s testimony, Varner read a portion of the study that stated: “While some linked database reports find that compared to unexposed offspring, those exposed to Paroxetine during the first trimester are at higher risk. These results are disputed by other reports including several large case cohort studies.”

The actual study lists citations to papers that supposedly support this statement, which included papers by Louik and Alwan. On redirect, Tracey asked Healy: “Do those two papers stand for that proposition?”

“No, they don’t,” Healy said. “They both show an increase in risk with Paxil.” Tracey pointed out that this study “curiously enough came out this month.” “It did,” Healy said. “This was quite curious in its own right.”

They then went over the names of some of the authors that were not read during Varner’s questioning. Authors one and two were Kimberly Yonkers and Katherine Wisner. Healy testified that Yonkers and Wisner are affiliated with Glaxo and Yonkers was part of the women’s health advisory board for Paxil.

“They have been strongly associated with efforts to change the cultures,” he told the jury.
The disclosures for the study showed Wisner was on the speaker’s board of Glaxo and Yonkers had received a research grant from Eli Lilly in the past year and had received a study drug from Pfizer for a National Institute of Mental Health trial.

Tracey noted that Glaxo was not mentioned in Yonkers’ disclosures. “It’s curiously not,” Healy said.

A likely explanation for Yonkers’ non-disclosure is that she is a member of the DSM-V Task Force and according to the conflict of interest statement on the Task Force website, “Yonkers has agreed that, for the calendar year 2007 and continuing for the duration of her work on the DSM-V Task Force, her aggregate annual income derived from industry sources (excluding unrestricted research grants) will not exceed $10,000 during any calendar year.”

Diana Dell and Nada Stotland, the past president of the APA, were also co-authors and online disclosures show them listed as members of Glaxo speaker’s bureau.

A website called “Bio-med Experts,” contains papers authored or co-authored by Yonkers. A “preview profile” lists Yonkers’ co-publications with Katherine Wisner, Viguera Adele, Lori Altshuler, Diana Dell, Nata Stotland and a total of five with Lee Cohen.

She also co-authored 12 papers with Martin Keller, six with John Rush, and several with Allen Schatzberg and Zachary Stowe, all of whom were exposed by Grassley’s investigation as not properly disclosing all of their financial benefits from drug companies.

Throughout the trial, Glaxo maintained that it did not market Paxil to women of childbearing years or pregnant women. In fact, in her opening statement, Varner told the jury: “You will hear from that chair the folks who made the marketing decisions at GSK.”

“They will tell you that GSK did not, repeat, did not target pregnant women, did not target women of childbearing age,” she said.

Yet, in a 2003 supplement titled, “Special Issues Related to the Treatment of Depression in Women,” for the Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, Yonkers published an article derived from the teleconference, “Treating Depression: New Choices for a Chronic Problem,” supported by an unrestricted educational grant from Glaxo, which promoted the use of SSRIs by women from youth to old age.

In the conclusion section, Yonkers wrote, “SRIs (SSRIs) appear to be an efficacious treatment for women suffering from various depressive disorders throughout the life cycle. These agents have expanded treatment options for many women, especially women who experience intermittent symptoms such as with PMDD, and side effects of SRIs are typically less severe than those of TCAs.”

“SRIs appear to improve depressive symptoms in pregnant women and women suffering from postpartum depression, and they are a relatively safe option for breastfeeding mothers,” she said.

“Additionally, their effectiveness appears to be enhanced by estrogen, making them a favorable treatment option for older women suffering from postmenopausal depression.”

In 2004, Yonkers, Cohen, and authors that included two Glaxo employees, published a paper in, “Psychosomatic Medicine,” on a study titled, “Paroxetine Controlled Release for Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder: A Double-Blind, Placebo Controlled Trial.”

In the November 1, 2006 issue of “Journal of Women’s Health,” Yonkers, Cohen and others, published a paper titled, “Expert Guidelines for the Treatment of Severe PMS, PMDD, and Comorbidities: The Role of SSRIs.”

This work was supported by an educational grant-in-aid from Glaxo, the disclosure advised. “Several treatment modalities are beneficial in PMDD and severe PMS, but the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) have emerged as first-line therapy,” the abstract states.

“A burgeoning body of literature has emerged that supports the role of the SSRIs as first-line treatment of PMDD and severe PMS,” the authors wrote in the discussion section.

Back in December 2005, Yonkers was out doing damage control for Glaxo when the FDA changed the Paxil pregnancy category from C to D, and warned that, “studies in pregnant women (controlled or observational) have demonstrated a risk to the fetus,” and said the FDA “has determined that exposure to paroxetine in the first trimester of pregnancy may increase the risk for congenital malformations, particularly cardiac malformations.”

On December 14, 2005, the Washington Post wrote, Kim Yonkers “cautioned that the database studies that the FDA had used had limitations: Unlike controlled studies, Paxil may have been prescribed far more than other drugs, skewing the results.”

She also claimed the databases sometimes concealed unrelated medical problems that could alter outcomes, the Post reported.

“Depression is still undertreated,” Yonkers said. “Pregnant women in particular are immensely undertreated, and you worry about people being unduly frightened.”

Yonkers’ September, 2009 report noted that in 2003, approximately 13% of pregnant women took an antidepressant sometime during their pregnancy. There are over 4 million babies born each year in the US, according to the CDC, which means about 520,000 pregnant women took antidepressants in 2003, and that would only cover live births. There is no telling how many infants may have died before birth, as a result of their mother’s use of SSRIs.

In 2006, Yonkers became president of the North American Society for Psychosocial Obstetrics and Gynecology, after Diana Dell turned the job down. The April 2006 Spring Newsletter discussed this group’s annual meeting, held in Hawaii no less. “The symposia at our 33rd Annual Meeting were fabulous, and we all appreciated the luxurious hotel and beautiful Big Island’s many charms,” the newsletter stated.

“Kim Yonkers’ unending drive, and with significant assistance from Meir Steiner and Claudio Soars culminated in our Sponsors contributing generously towards the symposia,” it said. The sponsors listed included the drug companies Berlex, Sepracor, and Wyeth.

Although the judge ruled that Healy could not elaborate on the Nemeroff and Stowe saga, during cross-examination, Varner opened the door a crack by directly asking Healy about the reputations of the various doctors shown to be on Glaxo’s payroll.

“The last question I have about the documents that you reviewed with Mr. Tracey yesterday goes to the portion of your testimony when you and Mr. Tracey talked about various doctors who had received honoraria from GSK for various speaking engagements,” she said.

“And you listed Doctor Altshuler, Doctor Wisner, Doctor Burt, Doctor Yonkers, Doctor Cohen, Doctor Nemeroff, Doctor Stowe, and Doctor Szuba,” she pointed out.

“They are generally respected in the medical community?,” she asked Healy.

“The issue of the degree of respect within the medical community is one that’s open to question at the moment,” Healy said.

“It would be interesting to know what the degree of respect for Doctor Nemeroff or Doctor Stowe in the medical community is at the moment,” he added.

The latest news on Nemeroff came on January 4, 2010, when Pharmalot carried the headline: “Charles Nemeroff and the House That Glaxo Built?”, and Ed Silverman wrote, “the controversial psychiatry professor who became a subject of a US Senate Finance Committee inquiry into academic research and pharma industry influence, is joining the University of Miami’s Miller School of Medicine.”
“Of course, this means leaving his previous job at Emory University in Atlanta and so he’s just purchased a $1.9 million house in the Coconut Grove section of Miami,” Silverman said. “The 5,204-square-foot home has six bedrooms and seven bathrooms,” according BlockShopper.

Nemeroff “came to the Senate committee’s attention because he was accepting sizeable consulting fees from Glaxo at the same that he was the primary investigator on an NIH-funded grant for research into a Glaxo drug,” he pointed out.

“In any event,” Silverman wrote, “the new home appears big enough to house plenty of consulting materials.”

Amazingly, none of the KOLs or advisory panel members on Glaxo’s payroll discussed above, who are so “generally respected in the medical community,” according to Varner, were recruited to testify for Glaxo in the first birth defect trial.

Ghostbusting

Yonkers now works at Yale, but she received her medical training at the Columbia College of Physicians and Surgeons, and completed a residency and fellowship at McLean Hospital, Harvard Medical School. Lee Cohen and Adele Viguera are still at Harvard.

The month after the trial ended, in November 2009, Grassley sent letters to ten medical schools asking them to describe their policies on plagiarism and ghostwriting and to identify any complaints or investigations of faculty members dating back to 2004. The Universities included Columbia, Yale, Harvard, Duke, Stanford, Johns Hopkins, University of Pennsylvania, Washington University, University of California at San Francisco, and University of Washington.

“Essentially, the companies are using the reputation of prestigious academic researchers and their institutions to promote the sale of drugs and devices,” Grassley said in the letters.

“Articles published in medical journals are widely read by practitioners and are relied upon as being objective and scientific in nature,” he wrote. “The information in these articles can have a significant impact on doctors’ prescribing behavior and, in turn, on the American taxpayer, as the Medicare and Medicaid programs pay billions of dollars for prescription drugs and medical devices. “
“Any attempt to manipulate the scientific literature, which can in turn mislead doctors to prescribe treatments that may be ineffective and/or cause harm to their patients, is very troubling,” Grassley said.
“Students are disciplined for not acknowledging that a paper they turned in was written by somebody else,” Grassley said. “But what happens when researchers at the same university publish medical studies without acknowledging that they were written by somebody else?”

Back July 2009, Grassley asked eight medical journals to describe their policies and practices regarding ghostwriting. “Articles published in medical journals are widely read by practitioners and are relied upon as being objective and scientific in nature,” he said in letters to the journals. “Concerns have been raised, however, that some medical literature may be little more than subtle advertisements rather than independent research.”

On January 3, 2010, the New York Times ran the headline: “Harvard Teaching Hospitals Cap Outside Pay”. “Senior officials at the two hospitals, Massachusetts General and Brigham and Women’s Hospitals in Boston, must limit their pay for serving as outside directors to what the policy calls “a level befitting an academic role” — no more than $5,000 a day for actual work for the board,” reporter Duff Wilson wrote.

“Some had been receiving more than $200,000 a year,” he said. “Also, they may no longer accept stock.“
As an example, the Times noted that Dr Daniel Podolsky was the original chairman of the Partners policy commission in 2007, when “he was the chief academic officer at Partners and a $191,000-a-year board member at GlaxoSmithKline.”

Partners HealthCare is also forbidding speaker’s fees from drug companies for any employee, “including nearly 8,000 with Harvard faculty appointments,” the Times reported.

No free lunch – call for end to drug firms’ gifts

I see the BBC are running this story today:

Medical experts are calling for drug industry representatives to stop giving gifts to doctors, the BBC has learned.

The report was created by a working party led by the Royal College of Physicians and including members of leading pharmaceutical companies.

The report says the measure would do much to rebalance the relationship between medicine and industry.

The UK regulator, the GMC, says gifts must not be accepted which could be seen to affect clinicians’ judgement.

The industry’s current code of practice allows drug companies to give small promotional gifts that are relevant to doctors’ work, such as pens or surgical gloves.

The report is to be published this Wednesday (4 Feb), but from what I’ve read in the BBC article it may have missed the point. Rather than examine the tiny tip of the iceberg, we should be much more concerned with the massive amount of activity that is hidden beneath the surface.

Maybe I should let a Doctor explain what I mean. Dr Des Spence is the UK spokesman for No Free Lunch which is an international group of health professionals with members around the world which is concerned with exposing drug marketing techniques used by pharma companies.

This is from the website No Free Lunch:

In the UK almost all doctors work for the NHS. Most doctors are state educated and are supported through university by the taxpayer. Most doctors are high earners with salaries of £80,000 plus. Doctors also enjoy full employment and a generous pension scheme. Doctors are the most trusted of all the professions and enjoy a high social status. Should doctors be indebted to the state and the NHS for all these privileges?

Most doctors are hard working,decent people seeking only to serve their communities. The public need to understand, however, that in general terms doctors are only a cross section of society sharing all the strengths and weaknesses of humanity. They are not different.

Doctors enjoy widespread hospitality from pharmaceutical companies. This is not just a few pens. Many doctors have lunch provided on a daily basis, attend meals in expensive restaurants, visits luxury hotels and many are flown to international destinations. NHS doctors can receive many thousands of pounds working for companies but these payments are not disclosed. All this hospitality and money directly effects the medications that you are prescribed. Vioxx and Seroxat were both promoted by these methods. No other public servants would be allowed such payments or hospitality. Do you think that all such contacts and payments should be disclosed to you the patients? We do.

Consider these facts:

  • The pharmaceutical industry spends billions on marketing its drugs. In the USA more money was spent promoting a single medication than was spent selling Budweiser. In the UK billions are spent on promotion.
  • The pharmaceutical industry has close links with the top medical experts many of whom receive direct large financial payments. These payments are not declared to other doctors and certainly not to patients
  • About 80% of new medications are not in fact new but merely a rehash of old medications. Millions die in the developing world but little research is done because the profits are in the developed world.
  • Pharma Companies use GPs to conduct research. Some GP practices are making tens of thousands of pounds every year through this work. These payments are undisclosed to patients. This research is done on NHS premises and often during normal office hours.
  • Many top specialists are flown first class around the world to attend international meetings. These meeting are “educational” but may be set in the most exotic locations like Brazil, the USA etc. These are all expenses paid – that’s hotel, drinks, the whole bunna! Is this education or promotion? You decide.
  • GPs are paid for giving feedback to marketing companies. This can be in the form of cash (literally in envelopes). £50 for 10 minutes “work”.
  • It is estimated that twice as many people die from adverse drug reactions than die on our roads. Yet we have police, speed cameras, traffic calming measures. The drugs industry has no such checks. A leading specialist at a parliamentary inquiry claimed that many regulators across Europe had been “captured” by the pharmaceutical industry. The current drug regulatory system is rather like asking speeding motorist to report him or herself!
  • The industry is accused of widespread suppression of negative research data and using ghostwriters in place of doctors to write research papers.
  • The regulator known as the MRHA is almost entirely funded by the Pharmaceutical Industry. Many of those working for the regulator have also worked for the drugs industry. Is this acceptable?

If you’d like to know more just have a look here for some of my collected posts on this very topic.

Many of the activities that drug companies undertake to market their products can only be described as criminal.

Still, not to worry – a focus on putting a stop to the handing out of free pens and surgical gloves will be the answer…

… but just remember “The report was created by a working party led by the Royal College of Physicians and including members of leading pharmaceutical companies”.

Pharmaceutical Industry Hustlers – Part I SSRI Antidepressants Pushers

As ever, Evelyn Pringle provides us with another well considered, in-depth article. This time she is writing about ‘Pharmaceutical Industry Hustlers’ – the key opinion leaders (KOL) whose reputations are for sale. Doctors such as Nemeroff and Keller in the USA and Montgomery in the UK can be relied on to say whatever a drug company tells them to, providing they are paid enough.

It’s an absolute scandal and the time has come to bring these KOLs to justice – in the words of Barack Obama’s campaign  – Change we need.

Now read on:

After twenty long years, it appears that the epidemic in mental disorders in America might be coming to an end. It won’t happen because of any great medical breakthrough but rather because the perpetrators of the greatest healthcare fraud in history are finally being exposed. The demolition of the giant “psycho-pharmaceutical complex” appears to be on the horizon.

For far too long, the focus has been on the drugmakers only. In recent months, the spotlight has shown where it belongs – on the highly-paid opportunists responsible for fueling the epidemic in prescribing of psychiatric drugs by doctors in every field of medicine and the research institutions that enabled the process.

The antidepressants known as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, or SSRI’s, such as Prozac, Paxil, Zoloft, Celexa and Lexapro are at the center of the storm. These drugs have been prescribed to more Americans than any other class of medications over the past two decades. Cymbalta, Effexor and Wellbutrin are often referred to as SSRI’s, but they are slightly different chemically. However, the drugs all carry similar side effects and warnings.

The top sales pitch for SSRI’s has been the “chemical-imbalance-in-the-brain” myth. “There is no evidence whatsoever that depression is caused by a biochemical imbalance,” says Dr Peter Breggin, one of the world’s leading experts on psychiatric drugs and author of the new book, “Medication Madness.”

People take for granted pronouncements such as, “You have a biochemical imbalance,” and “mental disorders are like diabetes,” he explains in the book.

“In reality,” Dr Breggin writes, “these are not scientific observations – they are promotional slogans, so adamantly repeated in the media and by individual psychiatrists that people assume them to be true.”

“The psycho-pharmaceutical complex fosters these falsehoods in order to promote the widespread use of their products,” he says. “Reluctant patients by the millions are pushed into taking drugs by doctors who tell them with no uncertainty that they need medication.”

“If you have got a biochemical imbalance in your brain,” Dr Breggin advises in the book, “the odds are overwhelming that your doctor put it there with a psychiatric drug.”

All Eyes on Glaxo

At the moment, all eyes are on Paxil maker, GlaxoSmithKline (formerly SmithKline Beecham), due to reports that the company is under investigation by the US Department of Justice, as well as the Senate Finance Committee, with Iowa’s Senator Charles Grassley, the ranking Republican on the Committee, leading the charge.

The report that led to the investigation by Senator Grassley was generated in litigation and was only recently made public after it was unsealed by the court. It was submitted by Dr Joseph Glenmullen, a Clinical Instructor in Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and author of “The Antidepressant Solution” and “Prozac Backlash: Overcoming the Dangers of Prozac, Zoloft, Paxil, and Other Antidepressants with Safe, Effective Alternatives.” He was retained as an expert by the Los Angeles-based law firm of Baum, Hedlund, Aristei & Goldman. The litigation involves several Paxil-induced suicide cases, including a 13-year-old child.

The report shows that Glaxo knew in 1989, long before Paxil was FDA approved, that people taking the drug were 8 times more likely to engage in suicidal behavior than people given a placebo, or sugar pill. Now, it stands to reason that even the most depressed person would decline to take Paxil if given these facts. Also, parents certainly would decline if they were told about the risks.

Dr Glenmullen explains that, by submitting what he refers to as “bad” Paxil numbers to the FDA, Glaxo was able to avoid adding a warning about suicide to the label when the drug was approved. “GlaxoSmithKline’s ‘bad’ Paxil numbers carried the day: The FDA approved Paxil on December 29, 1992, with no warning to doctors or patients of the significant increased risk of suicidal behavior,” he writes.

Instead, Glaxo listed suicide and suicide attempts that took place during the “run-in” period of the studies as if they happened in the placebo group. The run-in period, also called the “wash-out” phase, occurs when all patients are taken off their existing drugs to let the old drugs wash out of their systems, and all patients are given placebos. The rationale for washing out old drugs is to prevent them from confusing the results of the study, so that patients start out in a similar condition, according to the report.

The official trial only begins after the wash-out phase, once the patients are assigned to receive either the antidepressant or a placebo. The patients who continue to receive the placebo are referred to as the “placebo group.”

“Confusing the pre-study placebo wash-out phase with the placebo group in the actual study is improper,” Dr Glenmullen writes, “especially when the concern is a potentially lethal side effect.”

The “correct data shows that suicide attempts in patients on Paxil occurred at a rate eight times higher than the rate in patients on placebo,” he notes.

Senator Grassley has also asked the FDA to go back and review the clinical trial data submitted on Paxil. In a statement on the Senate floor on June 11, 2008, he said: “Essentially, it looks like GlaxoSmithKline bamboozled the FDA.”

“We cannot live in a nation where drug companies are less than candid, hide information and attempt to mislead the FDA and the public,” he stated. “These companies are selling drugs that we put in our bodies, not sneakers.”

“When they manipulate or withhold data to hide or minimize findings about safety and/or efficacy they put patient safety at risk,” Senator Grassley said. “And with drugs like Paxil, the risks are too great.”

A good start

As the Glaxo scandal unravels, the public will learn that other antidepressant makers such as Eli Lilly, Pfizer, Wyeth and Forest Laboratories are equally guilty. Likewise, there are many more supposedly independent academic doctors who have been receiving substantial financial benefits from drug companies than are currently identified in the media as being under investigation.

Exposing Harvard University’s Joseph Biederman, Thomas Spencer, Timothy Wilens, Stanford’s Alan Schatzberg, Brown University’s Martin Keller, Melissa DelBello at the University of Cincinnati, and Drs Karen Wagner and John Rush, who operated out of the University of Texas, might be a good place to start, but the trail of Big Pharma’s funding “academic research” for marketing purposes certainly does not end with a handful of psychiatrists.

According to Senator Grassley’s June 4, 2008 statement in the Congressional record, although conflict-of-interest disclosure forms make it appear that the Harvard psychiatrists only received a couple hundred thousand from drug companies over the past 7 years, the true figures show Dr Biederman received over “$1.6 million,” Dr Spencer “over $1 million” and Dr Wilens “over $1.6 million” in payments from the drug companies.

“Based on reports from just a handful of drug companies,” he states, “we know that even these millions do not account for all of the money.”

Senator Grassley also notes that Dr Schatzberg owns stock worth more than $6 million in one drug company. Ed Silverman reports on Pharmalot that there are “30 or so physicians at two dozen universities which the Senate Finance Committee is probing concerning disclosure of grants from drugmakers.” The names of those 30 doctors, along with the research mills they operate out of, need to be made public.

The new book, “Side Effects: A Prosecutor, a Whistleblower, and a Best-selling Antidepressant on Trial,” by investigative journalist Alison Bass, provides the inside scoop on the fraudulent SSRI research conducted at Brown University by Dr Keller.

The book also supplies background information on the financial ties between the so-called “opinion leaders” in psychiatry and the other antidepressant makers. For instance, Ms Bass explains that Drs Schatzberg and Keller worked as a team a decade ago to promote Bristol-Myers Squibb’s antidepressant Serzone.

In 1998, Dr Schatzberg was paid to moderate an industry-sponsored symposium that touted the benefits of Serzone, and Dr Keller was one of the paid speakers at the event. The same year, Dr Keller received $77,400 in consulting fees from Bristol-Myers, Ms Bass points out.

Dr Keller later published a study in the New England Journal of Medicine also touting the benefits of Serzone. The drug was removed from the market in 2004 after it was found to cause liver damage but not before a number of patients died.

Ms Bass reports that Keller did not report any income from Glaxo on his 1998 tax return. But during her research for “Side Effects,” she discovered he had earned personal income from Glaxo in 1998, as well as subsequent years. Keller admitted as much during a September 2006 deposition for a lawsuit filed against Glaxo, she says.

It is no longer a case where Americans need only be concerned about the amount of money the academics are pulling in. The pharmaceutical industry also has a stronghold on most major research institutions in this country. Many could not exist if the drug companies withdrew all their research funding, a state of affairs that did not occur by accident.

In fact, according to Dr Aubrey Blumsohn, who publishes the Scientific Misconduct Blog, when all is said and done:

“The chief villains remain our academic institutions and medical leadership. They have colluded with and have acted as apologists for commercial scientific fraud. They have tolerated the telling of lies by senior academics. They have encouraged the prostitution of medicine. They have allowed abuse of the most fundamental safeguards of science. Most importantly, they have set terrible examples for our students.”

Universities keep corrupt academics on board for good reason. “Side Effects” reports that, between 1990 and 1998, “Martin Keller brought in nearly $8.7 million in research funding from pharmaceutical companies.”

The clinical trial industry itself provides a perfect slush fund. Spending in the U.S. was an estimated $25 billion in 2006 and is expected to reach about $32 billion by 2011. Most of the money for trials comes from private industry, and federal funding assumes a second place position, with the National Institute of Health budgeting $3 billion for clinical trials in 2006, according to the paper, “State Medical Board Responses To An Inquiry On Physician Researcher Misconduct,” by Dr Stefan Kruszewski, Dr Richard Paczynski and Marzana Bialy, in the Journal of Medical Licensure and Discipline 2008: Vol 94 No 1.

Paxil Study 329

“Side Effects” also covers the whole sordid affair on Paxil Study 329, the most infamous fraudulent pediatric trial of all time. The study “offers a landmark for the point at which science turned into marketing,” according to Dr David Healy.

Dr Healy is a Professor of psychiatry and Director of the North Wales School of Psychological Medicine at the University of Wales, and an outspoken critic of the psycho-pharmaceutical complex, with 21 books to his name, including “The Creation of Psychopharmacology.”

He explains that, in 1998, Glaxo’s original assessment of Study 329 had concluded that it and another study had shown Paxil did not work for children, but that it would not be “commercially acceptable” to publicize this finding. “Instead the positive findings from the study would be published; they were in an article whose authorship line contains some of the best known names in psychopharmacology (Keller et al., 2001),” Dr Healy writes in the 2007 paper, “The Engineers of Human Souls & Academia.”

Dr Keller gets most of the “credit” for the study, which was completed in the mid-90’s. Keller et al had some difficulty getting it published at first, but finally found a journal willing to take the bate in 2001, the Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. In all, 20 academics allowed their names to be attached to this ghostwritten infomercial, and not one has stepped forward to acknowledge wrongdoing or to admit that a mistake was made.

Long before the paper was published, the authors of study 329 were fanned out all the way to Canada giving lectures and presentations to prescribing doctors at medical conferences and seminars to promote the off-label use of Paxil for kids. More than any other paper, Study 329 led to an epidemic in pediatric prescribing. “After its publication, the use of antidepressants for children skyrocketed,” Dr Glenmullen notes.

These handsomely paid “key opinion leaders” all deserve to have their names in lights, especially Drs Graham Emslie and Karen Wagner from the University of Texas.

Between 2000 through 2005, Glaxo paid Dr Wagner $160,404, but the only payment she reported to the university was $600 in 2005, according to Senator Grassley. Dr Wagner also failed to disclose earnings of more than $11,000 from Prozac-maker Eli Lilly in 2002.

On August 18, 2008, the Dallas Morning News reported that a “state mental health plan naming the preferred psychiatric drugs for children has been quietly put on hold over fears drug companies may have given researchers consulting contracts, speakers fees or other perks to help get their products on the list.”

“The Children’s Medication Algorithm Project, or CMAP, was supposed to determine which psychiatric drugs were most effective for children and in what order they should be tried at state-funded mental health centers,” the Morning News explains.

The academics who developed the CMAP include Drs Wagner and Emslie. Records show Dr Emslie may have made up to “$125,000 from drug companies since 2004,” according to the report in the Morning News.

While Dr Keller took the lead on pushing Paxil for children and adolescents, Dr Emslie was the main man on the Prozac trials, and Dr Wagner was the queen bee on Zoloft studies. The co-authors of papers that appear in the medical literature encouraging the use of SSRI’s for kids include Drs Biederman, Schatzberg, Wilens and, of course, Charles Nemeroff.

Dr Nemeroff was recently forced to resign as chairman of Emory’s psychiatry department after Senator Grassley’s investigation revealed that he failed to disclose to his university more than a million dollars in drug industry income. All total, Nemeroff had earnings of $2.8 million from drug companies between 2000 and 2007, but failed to report at least $1.2 million.

A complete list of academics who should to be investigated can be found among the authors of the SSRI papers and studies highlighted in the 2006 Third Edition of, “Essentials of Clinical Psychopharmacology,” described as “a synopsis and update of the most clinically relevant material from ‘The American Psychiatric Publishing Textbook of Psychopharmacology,'” by none other than Drs Schatzberg and Nemeroff.

Keep Following the Money

On July 10, 2008, Senator Grassley extended his investigation to include psychiatry’s top industry-funded front group with a letter to Dr James Scully, Medical Director and Chief Executive Officer of the American Psychiatric Association, asking for “an accounting of industry funding that pharmaceutical companies and/or the foundations established by these companies have provided to the American Psychiatric Association.”

The Senator wants records from January 2003 to the present. According to the July 12, 2008, New York Times, in 2006, the “industry accounted for about 30 percent of the association’s $62.5 million in financing.”

A factor rarely discussed in this debate is the amount of money doctors who prescribe SSRI’s make during brief office calls charged at regular rates. This practice has taken a tremendous toll on public healthcare programs and has resulted in higher insurance premiums and overall healthcare costs for all Americans.

In fact, the bilking of public healthcare programs is what led to the current investigations by the Finance Committee, which has the responsibility of overseeing spending in Federal programs. When doctors prescribe drugs for unnecessary uses, public programs not only have to pay for the drugs, they must also pay the fees of the prescribing doctors and for the medical care for injuries caused by the drugs. Government spending tied to the prescribing of psychiatric drugs has gone through the roof in the past decade.

While testifying before the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform on February 9, 2007, Lewis Morris, Chief Counsel at the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Inspector General, discussed kickbacks to doctors and told the panel:

“Kickbacks potentially increase the costs to Federal programs because they encourage overutilization and may encourage the prescribing of more expensive drugs when clinically appropriate and cheaper options (such as generic drugs) may be equally effective.”

Mr Morris explained that, “kickbacks offered to prescribing physicians by pharmaceutical manufacturers take a variety of forms, ranging from free samples for which the physician bills the programs to all-expense-paid trips and sham consulting agreements.”

Vermont is a rare state in requiring the pharmaceutical industry to disclose the money paid to doctors. On July 8, 2008, Vermont’s Attorney General William Sorrell released the state’s annual report on “Pharmaceutical Marketing Disclosures,” which lists the payments made by drug companies in 2007. Of the top 100 recipients, once again, psychiatrists received the highest payments. Eleven psychiatrists received a total of $626,379, or about 20% of the total value of payments made, according to the report.

Shrinks on the take are so addicted to industry money that it’s impossible to embarrass them. Last year, the press ran major stories when this report came out, highly critical of how much money they were making. This year, the average amount rose by 25%.

The report also analyzes the payments based upon the drugs being marketed. Of the top 10 drugs for which disclosures were reported, five are used to treat mental illness and include Lilly’s Cymbalta and Forest Lab’s Lexapro. Ironically, Cymbalta sales are also up 25%, according to Lilly’s latest SEC filing.

Overall, estimates indicate that the drug industry spends $19 billion annually on marketing to physicians in the form of gifts, travel, meals and other consulting fees, according to a May 22, 2008, press release by Senator Grassley’s office. In the November 1, 2007, New England Journal of Medicine paper, “Doctors and Drug Companies — Scrutinizing Influential Relationships,” Dr Eric Campell, associate professor at the Institute of Health Policy at Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, writes:

“Individual physicians can take some steps to maximize the benefits for patients and minimize the risks associated with their own industry relationships. They can start by recognizing that such relationships are designed to influence prescribing behavior and by carefully considering the potential effects that their own associations may have on their patients.”

“And they can bear in mind,” he says, “that the costs of industry dinners, trips, and other incentives are passed along to their patients in the form of higher drug prices.”

Antidepressant prescribing is more rampant in this country than any other. The US accounted for 66% of the global market in 2005, compared to 23% in Europe and 11% for the rest of world, according to a December 2006 report by Research and Markets.

A June 2007 survey by the Centers for Disease Control of doctor and hospital visits in 2005 showed that the most commonly prescribed drugs were antidepressants, with 48% of the prescriptions issued by primary care physicians. They have remained in the number one position ever since. Last year, 232 million prescriptions were filled for antidepressants worth nearly $12 billion, according to a March 2008 report by IMS Health.

The top dogs in the pharmaceutical industry are literally laughing all the way to the bank. For example, in 2007, Pfizer CEO Jeff Kindler’s pay package was worth $9.5 million, according to the March 14, 2008, Wall Street Journal. A previous CEO, David Shedlarz, left last year with an “exit package” worth over $34 million. In 2007, the total value of Wyeth’s then-CEO Robert Essner’s pay package was $24.1 million, the Journal reports.

In the meantime, state Medicaid programs are going bankrupt as a result of the mental illness epidemic occurring only in the US. Attorneys General all over the country are using consumer fraud statutes to sue the drug giants to recoup the money lost due to the illegal off-label promotion of psychiatric drugs and the concealment of their side effects.

For instance, Baum Hedlund has been litigating Private Attorney General consumer fraud class-action lawsuits against Glaxo since 2004, on behalf of individuals and entities such as insurance companies in California, Florida, Illinois, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Missouri, New Jersey, North Dakota, Ohio and Washington.

The cases are based on documents showing Glaxo promoted Paxil for kids, fully aware that Paxil failed to out-perform a placebo in the clinical trials and had higher suicidality rates. A national class settlement of individual claims was reached in April 2007 in which Glaxo agreed to reimburse parents for all of the money paid for Paxil prescriptions for their children. A national class settlement on behalf of third party payors (insurance companies) was just approved in September 2008.

If not for the few law firms willing to stay the course, the truth would never have been revealed. Baum Hedlund has been pursuing the SSRI makers for nearly two decades. Most recently, it has taken up the fight for babies born with birth defects caused by SSRI’s.

Because the industry was so successful at keeping the original SSRI trial data hidden, the drugs’ most serious side effects largely became public only as a result of the bravery and integrity of such medical experts as Dr Healy, Dr Glenmullen and Dr Breggin, who could not be bought and could not be bullied.

For fifteen years, the SSRI makers fought against adding a warning about an increased risk of suicidality, knowing all the long that the risk existed. Now, the companies are making the irresponsible argument (in defense of lawsuits claiming they failed to warn doctors and the public of the risk) that the FDA did not require them to add a warning, so they are immune from liability.

Worse yet, the industry-controlled FDA under the Bush Administration is supporting this audacious preemption defense and siding with the SSRI makers against private citizens in courts all over the country, telling judges to rule in favor of the drug companies and throw out the SSRI cases before they even make it to a jury.

Although not an SSRI case, the Supreme Court heard oral argument in a case involving federal preemption, in Wyeth v Levine, on November 3, 2008.

Charles Nemeroff resigns from Emory University – that’s not the end of it though…

So, we say farwell to Chuck “Bling Bling” Nemeroff as he resigns from Emory.

Sorry Chuck, but it’s too little too late. You’ve done the damage already by talking up shitty drugs and crappy research. If you think this is over now, you’ve got another think coming – the time is right to finally bring a so-called Key Opinion Leader to account for his lies. I hope Senator Grassley agrees with me.

If we’re going to put a stop to KOLs selling their reputations to the highest bidders then we need an example to be made of someone. It seems Senator Grassley has the evidence against Nemeroff to do this – does he have the nerve, I wonder?

This from Phil Dawdy at Furious Seasons:

A few of you have probably already caught the news elsewhere: yesterday, Charles Nemeroff resigned as chair of the psychiatry department at Emory University. The move came on the heels of revelations that he’d taken in $2.8 million in pharma consulting monies since 2000, but had only reported less than half of that–all while taking NIH research grants on the other hand and assuring his university that he was taking in less than $10,000 a year in pharma dough.

For those of you who don’t know, Nemeroff is one of the biggest depression researchers in the world and his work is hugely influential in the field. But as CL Psych has repeatedly detailed, Nemeroff’s work is often scientifically compromised.

Emory University has issued a statement:

“Dr. Nemeroff is recognized internationally as a leader in psychiatric research, education and practice. He has made fundamental contributions to the field over many years. The length and complexity of the history outlined by Senator Grassley will require careful review of underlying payment records from the pharmaceutical companies, which we have requested from Senator Grassley’s office. We have also requested that Dr. Nemeroff provide us with relevant information and documentation so that we will have all the facts before us.

“Dr. Nemeroff has assured us that: ‘To the best of my knowledge, I have followed the appropriate University regulations concerning financial disclosures. I have dedicated my career to translating research findings into improvements in clinical practice in patients with severe mental illness. I will cooperate fully and work with Emory to respond to the alleged conflicts of interest issues raised by Senator Grassley and his staff.'”

Whatever, dude.

Read more about all this – here, here and here

Joe Biederman – Key Opinion Leader…

Key Opinion Leaders (KOLs) are a very important part of the marketing mix that pharma companies use to promote their product. This article from the San Francisco Chronicle by Dr Lawrence Diller tells the story of one KOL.

Most parents have never heard of him, but Joseph Biederman of Harvard may be the United States’ most influential doctor when it comes to determining whether their children are normal or mentally ill.

In 1996, for example, Biederman suggested that drugs like Ritalin might serve 10 percent of American kids for Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder. By 2004, one in nine 11-year-old boys was taking the drug. Biederman and his team also are more responsible than anyone for a child bipolar epidemic sweeping America (and no other country) that has 2-year-olds on three or four psychiatric drugs.

The science of children’s psychiatric medications is so primitive and Biederman’s influence so great that when he merely mentions a drug during a presentation, tens of thousands of children within a year or two will end up taking that drug, or combination of drugs. This happens in the absence of a drug trial of any kind – instead, the decision is based upon word of mouth among the 7,000 child psychiatrists in America.

That’s why Iowa Sen. Charles Grassley’s recent revelation that Biederman did not declare $1.6 million in drug company consulting fees is so important, scary and tragic. If true, this scandal is yet one more stake in the heart of American academic medicine’s credibility with frontline doctors like me – and more importantly, with the parents of the patients I deal with every day.

American medicine, with psychiatry the most culpable, has fallen back to a time more than 100 years ago when doctor credibility was tantamount to the promotion of patent medicine. Subsequent reforms severed ties between medical school doctors and the drug industry – and for decades there was a much more ethical balance between the industry and physicians.

Now once again, drug company money is corrupting medical practice and the maintenance of our country’s health. In a market economy, both doctors and the companies are motivated by profit. However, doctors’ Hippocratic oath and their personal/professional relationships with their patients attenuate the most crass aspects of a fee-for-service system.

In contrast, drug companies owe primary responsibility to their shareholders. Of course these companies must operate within legal business and Food and Drug Administration restraints, but the drive to push such rules to the limit is implicit in any business.

Such a strategy isn’t always beneficial when our children’s health is affected.

The Fortune 500 drug companies, by their sheer economic clout, have become the single most dominant influence in our health care system. The ambiguities of children’s mental health and illness make child psychiatry the most vulnerable branch of medicine open to such influence.

In this climate, drug company research money, professional medical education and direct advertisements to parents tilt families and doctors to biologically brain-based solutions, rather than nondrug (e.g., parenting and education) approaches.

That’s why we’re seeing famous (or infamous) Newsweek cover boys like Max, a 10-year-old who has taken 38 psychiatric medications in his short, unhappy life.

Research funding must be directed to the needs of patients and their doctors – not to the bottom line of stockholders. Drug companies can still make money, but it’s ethically immoral when stockholder profits trump children’s health needs (as in the cover-up of negative studies of antidepressants in children).

More money must be directed toward head-to-head competition between existing generics and the new products, and toward more studies comparing nondrug or combination approaches to drug-only interventions for children’s problems.

Drug company funding of medical research is not going to end – nor should it entirely stop. Yet a new set of federal rules dictating the transparency and direction of such funding is desperately needed to redress a dangerously corrupt system. It’s not enough to simply have doctors more explicitly report their incomes from drug companies, though it is a very useful first step.

I remember about six years ago when I read a major article by the Biederman team on the advantages of a non-Ritalin drug pathway for ADHD. On the same day, much to my dismay, I also heard him give a speech – for a Wall Street audience – promoting a new drug by Eli Lilly called Strattera.

Although Strattera turned out to be a bust both clinically and commercially for ADHD, I was still shaken that such a prominent researcher could be so brazen with his potential conflict of interest appearance.

The $1.6 million that Biederman didn’t declare is only a small fraction of the full amount of research funding that his clinic receives from nearly a dozen companies that pay for not only the cost of running studies but also the salaries of the doctors involved. Virtually all doctors who receive drug company money say they are not influenced, but every independent study examining the effects of such money says they are.

The leadership of Harvard’s psychiatry department is strangely silent or even defends Biederman. These are good men with solid reputations both in drug and nondrug aspects of treatment. Yet they know that their psychiatry department would not exist were it not for drug company money – considering the withdrawal of federal research dollars over the past 25 years and the meager reimbursements that psychiatrists receive for their services from insurance companies and Medi-Cal.

Sens. Grassley, a Republican, and Herbert Kohl, a Wisconsin Democrat, have introduced the Physician Payments Sunshine Act, which will require more vigorous reporting and enforcement on payments (anything more than $500) received by doctors from drug companies.

But in addition, we need laws to have the federal government, along with the major academic research centers, coordinate and direct the use of drug company money in medical research. This is not pie-in-the sky wishing. Such reform was precisely what the doctors of 100 years ago accomplished in this country.

Lawrence Diller, M.D., practices behavioral-developmental pediatrics in Walnut Creek and is on the clinical faculty of UCSF. He is the author of “The Last Normal Child” (Praeger, 2006).

Ghostwriters in the Sky

I know it’s April 1 – but believe me, this is no joke…

This information is from 2002 – thanks due once again to the (literally) tireless work of Truthman30 – make sure you put his blog GSK : Licence To (K)ill on your list to visit regulary.

What we’re talking about here is ghostwriting – Doctors and Key Opinion Leaders (KOLs) being paid by Glaxo to put their names on papers which purportedly analyse the data of clinical studies involving company products. Of course, the conclusions drawn from such ‘analysis’ are always positive and are then used to as part of the marketing of said drug. One of Glaxo’s favourite KOLs is ‘Marty’ Keller – just follow this link to find much, much about him!

Dr. David Dunner of the University of Washington’s Department of Psychiatry admitted he “ghostwrote” an article that appeared in the March 1995 issue of the journal European Neuropsychopharmacology (EN) on behalf of pharmaceutical manufacturer SmithKline-Beecham (which has since merged with GlaxoWellome to become Glaxo-Smith-Kline, or GSK). Dunner had purportedly analyzed the data of clinical studies involving GSK’s antidepressant and anti-anxiety drug Paxil and concluded that it is less likely to lead to suicidal thoughts than the older antidepressant imipramine or a placebo(sugar pill).

Dunner never looked at any of the data but he was still listed as an “author” of the article.

Meanwhile, Dr. David Healy of the University of Wales Department of Psychological Medicine presented a different analysis of this same data during the Paxil trial [of 2001]. The family of Wyoming resident Donald Schell, 60, sued GSK in federal court after Schell shot his wife, daughter, granddaughter and then himself to death in 1998 after two days on Paxil. Healy testified on behalf of the plaintiffs. He argued GSK’s internal records demonstrated that there is a substantially increased suicide risk for patients put on Paxil. The jury agreed with the plaintiff’s position that Paxil was primarily responsible for Schell’s actions and awarded them $6.4 million in June of [2001]. The judge in the case rejected GSK’s challenge of Healy’s testimony and sent them packing to a federal appeals court in Denver in August.

A suicide warning has since been put on the label for the drug, not here in the United States, but in Britain, where it is known as Seroxat.

Dunner’s record also includes eight statements of significant financial interest. The most significant with regard to the Paxil clinical trial data is a disclosure he made in 1998. The disclosure was made regarding an application for a clinical trial dealing with Paxil in which Dunner would serve as an investigator at his Center for Anxiety and Depression. His Confidential Statement to the Vice Provost for Research states, “My involvement with SmithKlineBeecham (the pre-Glaxo merger owner of Paxil) involves being a member of the international advisory board related to paroxetine (Paxil).” In other words, Dunner’s name appeared in the EN article not as an independent scientist but most likely as a part-time employee of the manufacturer of Paxil. This conflict of interest is not mentioned in the EN article.

Here is Dunner in his own words… “I don’t know who saw it (the Paxil clinical trial data). I did not. My role in the paper was that the data were presented to us and we analyzed it and wrote it up and wrote references.” Dunner’s co-author Stuart Montgomery, then of St. Mary’s hospital medical school in London, declined comment for the Guardian article. His other co-author is Geoff Dunbar, a company employee (Dunbar’s status as a SmithKline employee was mention in the EN article).

You can read the full article here.

Last words to David Healy:
“The fact that (pharmaceutical) companies have chosen to market them as antidepressants rather than agents of agitation is a business decision rather than a scientific matter…”

No, actually last words to me: how long is this going to be allowed to go on?

We have the history of Seroxat ghostwriting documented and now Glaxo are doing EXACTLY the same thing with the newest anti-depressant they want approval for – Gepirone ER – see here, here and here.

The good Dr Keller

I hope that you all remember Dr Martin Keller – we were introduced to him in this week’s Panorama – Secrets of the Drug Trials.

Dr Keller is a KOL – a key opinion leader. He is also chair of psychiatry at Brown University in America. According to his curriculum vita, he has over 300 scientific publications. People take his opinions seriously. He is a serious KOL or thought leader in academia and sought by the drug industry.

A seriously expensive KOL if you want to ‘buy’ his key opinion leadership for your drug…

You really must read ‘Drug companies enrich Brown professor’ to appreciate just how much (and for how long) Keller has been favoured by the drug companies. This is an old article, which details Keller’s ‘consulting fees’ from the late 1990’s.

There’s even more to read here about the good Doctor.