Recently a study was published in the Milbank Quarterly analyzing the voting patterns of FDA Advisory Committee members with apparent conflicts of interest.
Since I would have to pay to actually get access to the full article, in my retired state I relied on the abstract and on a very useful New York Times article by Aaron Carroll for my blog today.
The author, Genevieve Pham-Kanter, analyzed the voting patterns of almost 400 FDA advisory committee members between 1997 and 2011. This involved almost 16,000 votes in almost 400 different advisory committee meetings. Some 13% of committee members reported a financial relationship with the sponsor who was the subject of the committee meeting.These members could be divided into two classes; one class had multiple financial relationships with multiple companies while the second had an exclusive relationship with the company in question.
As I look over the many advisory committees on anti-infectives that I attended over many years, I am struck by the lack of true clinical trial expertise of the advisors chosen by the FDA. This is because those folks are mostly working in industry or have worked in industry and therefore, according to the FDA, are forever conflicted.
The current roster (August this year) once again shows a list of academic experts and one person from the Gates Foundation. The only industry person, as is always (appropriately) the case, does not vote. But what would be wrong with getting some ex-industry people? Are we worried because they might still have stock options or are receiving retirement pay?
How about some ex- or even current consultants to industry who work with multiple clients? The FDA still desperately needs competent outside advice. In my view, for antibiotics especially, they don’t get it.