Conflicts of interest,
voting patterns at FDA Drug Advisory Committee meetings
Newswise — Disclosures of
conflicts of interest at Food and Drug Administration (FDA) drug
advisory committee meetings are common, often of considerable
financial value, and rarely result in the recusal of advisory
committee members, but excluding those with conflicts would not have
altered the overall vote outcome at any meeting, according to a
study published in the April 26 issue of JAMA.
The Center for Drug Evaluation and
Research (CDER) at the FDA approves 25 to 30 new chemical entities
each year, according to background information in the article. CDER
often relies on the advice of the advisory committees composed of
outside scientific experts. In 2001, 21 percent of these approvals
were preceded by an advisory committee meeting. The authors note
that recent high-profile cases have called attention to the possible
vulnerability of committee decisions to financial conflicts of
interest. A new FDA policy to disclose potential conflicts of
interest for advisory committee meetings discussing specific
products went into effect in January 2002. “Prior to any advisory
committee meeting, both voting advisory committee members and voting
consultants invited by the FDA are required to fill out form FDA
3410 detailing any financial interests they have, have had, or are
currently negotiating,” the authors write.
“Financial conflict types
on the form include current investments, employment, patents, and
contracts/grants/cooperative research and development agreements (CRADAs),
as well as consulting arrangements and speaking/writing arrangements
within the last 12 months. Any relevant conflicts of interest are
reported at the beginning of the advisory committee meeting in a
statement read aloud by the committee executive secretary.”
In this study, Peter Lurie, M.D.,
M.P.H., from Public Citizen’s Health Research Group, Washington,
D.C., and colleagues, collected data from January 1, 2001, to
December 31, 2004 by analyzing agendas and transcripts from all FDA
Drug Advisory Committee meetings listed on the FDA website.
“A total of 221 meetings held by
16 advisory committees were included in the study. In 73 percent of
the meetings, at least one advisory committee member or voting
consultant disclosed a conflict; only one percent of advisory
committee members were recused,” the authors found. “For advisory
committee members (n = 1,957) and voting consultants combined (n =
990), 28 percent (n = 825) disclosed a conflict. The most commonly
specified conflicts were consulting arrangements, contracts/grants,
and investments. Nineteen percent of consulting arrangements
involved over $10,000, 23 percent of contracts/grants exceeded
$100,000, and 30 percent of investments were over $25,000.”
Additionally, the authors state: “In all three conflict categories,
the exclusion of advisory committee members and voting consultants
with conflicts would have produced margins less favorable to the
index drug in the majority of the meetings, but this would not have
changed whether the majority favored or opposed the drug.”
“Ideally, all panels of scientific
experts advising a federal decision making body would be free of
financial conflicts of interest with the affected companies,” the
authors write. “Certainly, advisory committee members who have
conflicts of interest with higher dollar values should not be
allowed to participate. For advisory committee members with smaller
conflicts of interest, full transparency, including disclosure
several days before the meeting, is necessary to allow the objective
evaluation of committee decisions,” the authors conclude.
(JAMA. 2006;295:1921-1928. )