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Most Doctors Who Set Guidelines Have Industry Ties
Tue Feb 5, 5:43 PM ET
By Jacqueline Stenson
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - The vast majority of doctors involved in
establishing national guidelines on disease treatment have financial ties
to the pharmaceutical industry that could potentially sway their
recommendations and inappropriately influence thousands of other
physicians, a new study concludes.
Eighty-seven percent of guideline authors had some type of relationship
with drug companies, yet these often were not disclosed, according to
survey responses from 100 authors of guidelines published from 1991 to 1999
for common diseases such as diabetes, high blood pressure and asthma.
More specifically, 38% of respondents said they had served as employees or
consultants for pharmaceutical companies and 58% had received financial
support for medical research. In addition, 59% had links with drug
companies whose medications were considered in the particular guidelines
they authored, according to the report in the February 6th issue of The
Journal of the American Medical Association.
"The findings show that people who work on committees who write practice
guidelines have lots of financial relationships with companies whose
products they're assessing," study author Dr. Allan Detsky,
physician-in-chief at Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto, told Reuters Health.
And these figures may underestimate the problem, the researchers said,
because only 52% of the authors contacted for the survey responded. Some
may have declined to participate because they did not want to disclose
their industry relationships, the report indicates. Though the
investigators did not name names, the survey did not explicitly guarantee
anonymity.
While industry ties don't necessarily mean that a doctor can't provide an
objective opinion, "it's a potential problem," Detsky said.
In the study, the researchers did not actually search for concrete examples
in which industry ties translated into improper treatment recommendations.
But when respondents were asked whether relationships with drug companies
influenced guideline recommendations, 19% said they thought their
co-authors' recommendations were swayed by their relationships and 7% said
they thought their own relationships influenced recommendations.
Detsky pointed out that industry relationships are often an essential part
of doing business for doctors. Many of the nation's top medical researchers
at prestigious academic institutions--the same ones sought for guideline
authorship--have industry relationships because it is the pharmaceutical
companies who finance most of the nation's drug research. Detsky himself
has received honoraria for speeches, consulting fees and research grant
money from drug companies.
So how much industry involvement should disqualify a doctor from
participation in clinical guidelines? "That's the $64,000 question," Detsky
said. "Any cut point would be considered arbitrary with the possible
exception of zero involvement."
The researchers specifically recommended the disqualification of authors
who own equity in a company whose products are being reviewed in the
guidelines.
Beyond that, each medical group that sets guidelines should devise their
own ways for identifying and dealing with potential conflicts of interest
within their specialty--"ways we can preclude these conflicts from harming
the consumer," Detsky said.
In the survey, 55% of respondents said the guidelines they worked on had no
formal process for declaring relationships with drug companies. And just 2
of the 44 guidelines evaluated in the study listed the authors' industry
relationships in print.
SOURCE: The Journal of the American Medical Association 2002;287:612-617.
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