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When Prof Martin Cormican, a bacteriologist
at University College Hospital, Ireland, wrote to Bayer
in November last year asking for a supply of pure ciprofloxacin
and related products for his research into antibiotic resistance,
he was asked to sign a document stating that,
"We declare that
we will inform Bayer AG in writing of our test results and
will not publish or commercialize them without written permission
of Bayer AG".
He replied that he was
"concerned in
respect to the restriction on publication without permission".
A Bayer employee, Dr Andrew Saich, called
Cormican to say that he could neither waive nor remove the
restriction, but he was sure it would not be enforced. Dissatisfied
with this response, Cormican wrote to the European Commission
seeking their support for his unfettered right to publish
whatever results he obtained.
Philippe Jean replied on March 13, 2001,
describing the matter as "delicate". All he could
do was remind pharmaceutical companies of "the potential
public interest of this type of research".
Nobody would deny a pharmaceutical company
its right to commercialize results of scientific research.
But that issue is completely different from its "right"
to block publication.
The Lancet recently came under
pressure to remove a sentence from the discussion of
a research paper, which raised questions over the safety
of a drug. The lead author had shown the report to the
company after final journal pages were passed for publication.
She was satisfied with the paper but the company was unhappy.
The best way for the journal to support her was to promise
to publish an editorial naming the company and describing
its attempts to manipulate the study's conclusions, if the
offending sentence was removed. The final report remained
in its original form.
Efforts by drug companies to suppress,
spin, and obfuscate findings that do not suit their commercial
purposes were first revealed to their full, lethal extent
during the thalidomide tragedy. Although government
drug regulation schemes around the world are now in place,
the insidious tactics of big pharma have changed little.
For example, JAMA recently published
a study whose dataset was incomplete because the
sponsor refused to supply necessary information to the research
team. The issue at stake in all these cases is the relation
between a company that is sponsoring a study in some way
and the investigators. In protocols of trials that The
Lancet is provisionally committed to publish, the sponsor's
veto is occasionally made explicit, although there is usually
no corresponding statement affirming the right of investigators
to publish their results irrespective of the sponsor's views.
In addition, the sponsor's role in
interpreting data, writing the report, or publishing the
paper is far from clear, leaving a damaging ambiguity over
the entire research process.
The matter of malign commercial influence
in research is complicated by investigators' own conflicts
of interest. As research becomes driven by ever more
costly technologies, so industry will intrude even further
into the scientific process.
If medicine wants a flourishing research
culture, it will be hard to find ways to limit industry
involvement in medical research without constraining that
culture. But this position is weak and self-serving.
Instead, doctors must look to existing institutions to challenge,
on the public's behalf, forces of commercial bias that risk
staining permanently the integrity of medicine.
Governments, nationally and regionally,
have consistently failed to put their people before
profit. By contrast, academic institutions could intervene
to support scientists when financial conflicts threaten
to do harm. But these institutions have become businesses
in their own right, seeking to commercialize for themselves
research discoveries rather than preserve their independent
scholarly status.
Perhaps one last means of protection
is the scientific journal. It is the editorially independent,
peer-reviewed medical journal that remains a final common
path by which investigators obtain justified credit for
their work. Journal editors can do much to reinforce the
integrity of the science they publish.
Lancet
April 14, 2001 357:9263
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