August 5, 2009
Medical Papers by Ghostwriters Pushed Therapy
By NATASHA SINGER
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/05/health/research/05ghost.html?hp
Newly unveiled court documents show that ghostwriters paid by a pharmaceutical
company played a major role in producing 26 scientific papers backing the use of
hormone replacement therapy in women, suggesting that the level of hidden
industry influence on medical literature is broader than previously known.
The articles, published in medical journals between 1998 and 2005, emphasized
the benefits and de-emphasized the risks of taking hormones to protect against
maladies like aging skin, heart disease and dementia. That supposed medical
consensus benefited Wyeth, the pharmaceutical company that paid a medical
communications firm to draft the papers, as sales of its hormone drugs, called
Premarin and Prempro, soared to nearly $2 billion in 2001.
But the seeming consensus fell apart in 2002 when a huge federal study on
hormone therapy was stopped after researchers found that menopausal women who
took certain hormones had an increased risk of invasive breast cancer, heart
disease and stroke. A later study found that hormones increased the risk of
dementia in older patients.
The ghostwritten papers were typically review articles, in which an author
weighs a large body of medical research and offers a bottom-line judgment about
how to treat a particular ailment. The articles appeared in 18 medical journals,
including The American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology and The
International Journal of Cardiology.
The articles did not disclose Wyeth’s role in initiating and paying for the
work. Elsevier, the publisher of some of the journals, said it was disturbed by
the allegations of ghostwriting and would investigate.
The documents on ghostwriting were uncovered by lawyers suing Wyeth and were
made public after a request in court from PLoS Medicine, a medical journal from
the Public Library of Science, and The New York Times.
A spokesman for Wyeth said that the articles were scientifically accurate and
that pharmaceutical companies routinely hired medical writing companies to
assist authors in drafting manuscripts.
The court documents provide a detailed paper trail showing how Wyeth contracted
with a medical communications company to outline articles, draft them and then
solicit top physicians to sign their names, even though many of the doctors
contributed little or no writing. The documents suggest the practice went well
beyond the case of Wyeth and hormone therapy, involving numerous drugs from
other pharmaceutical companies.
“It’s almost like steroids and baseball,” said Dr. Joseph S. Ross, an assistant
professor of geriatrics at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York, who has
conducted research on ghostwriting. “You don’t know who was using and who
wasn’t; you don’t know which articles are tainted and which aren’t.”
Because physicians rely on medical literature, the concern about ghostwriting is
that doctors might change their prescribing habits after reading certain
articles, unaware they were commissioned by a drug company.
“The filter is missing when the reader does not know that the germ of an article
came from the manufacturer,” said James Szaller, a lawyer in Cleveland who has
spent four years going through the ghostwriting documents on behalf of hormone
therapy plaintiffs.
Wyeth faces about 8,400 lawsuits from women who claim that the company’s hormone
drugs caused them to develop illnesses. Twenty-three of the 31 cases that had
been set for trial were resolved in Wyeth’s favor; the company has also settled
with five plaintiffs. Others cases are on appeal.
Doug Petkus, a spokesman for Wyeth, said the articles on hormone therapy were
scientifically sound and subjected to rigorous review by outside experts on
behalf of the medical journals that published them.
Although Wyeth continues to work with medical writing firms, the company adopted
a policy in 2006 mandating that authors become involved early in the publication
process and that any financial assistance by Wyeth or contributions by medical
writers be acknowledged in the published text, said Stephen Urbanczyk, a lawyer
representing Wyeth.
Doctors have long debated the merits and risks of hormone therapy to treat the
symptoms of menopause. Although studies have shown that hormones have benefits
like reducing the incidence of hip fractures, they have also shown that the
drugs can increase the risk of various cancers.
At one time, the Premarin family of drugs, which dominated the market for
hormone therapy, was among Wyeth’s best-selling brands. And the company worked
with several ghostwriting companies to maintain that dominance.
In 1997, for example, DesignWrite, a medical communications company in
Princeton, N.J., proposed to Wyeth a two-year plan that would include the
preparation of about 30 articles for publication in medical journals.
The development of an article on the treatment of menopausal hot flashes and
night sweats illustrates DesignWrite’s methodology.
Sometime in 2003, a DesignWrite employee wrote a 14-page outline of the article;
the author was listed as “TBD” — to be decided. In July 2003, DesignWrite sent
the outline to Dr. Gloria Bachmann, a professor of obstetrics and gynecology at
the Robert Wood Johnson Medical School in New Brunswick, N.J.
Dr. Bachmann responded in an e-mail message to DesignWrite: “Outline is
excellent as written.” In September 2003, DesignWrite e-mailed Dr. Bachmann the
first draft of the article. She also pronounced that “excellent” and added, “I
only had one correction which I highlighted in red.”
The article, a nearly verbatim copy of the DesignWrite draft, appeared in 2005
in The Journal of Reproductive Medicine, with Dr. Bachmann listed as the primary
author. It described hormone drugs as the “gold standard” for treating hot
flashes and was less enthusiastic about other therapies.
The acknowledgments thanked several medical writers for their “editorial
assistance,” not disclosing that those writers worked for DesignWrite, which
charged Wyeth $25,000 to generate the article.
Dr. Bachmann, who has 30 years of research and clinical experience in menopause,
said she played a major role in the publication by lending her expertise. Her
e-mail messages do not reflect contributions she may have made during phone
calls and in-person meetings, she said.
“There was a need for a review article and I said ‘Yes, I will review the draft
and make sure it is accurate,’ ” Dr. Bachmann said in an interview Tuesday.
“This is my work, this is what I believe, this is reflective of my view.”
In response to a query from a reporter, Michael Platt, the president of
DesignWrite, wrote that the company “has not, and will not, participate in the
publication of any material in which it does not have complete confidence in the
scientific validity of the content, based upon the best available data.”
As medical journals learn more about ghostwriting through documents released in
lawsuits and in Congress, some editors have started asking authors harder
questions. A few leading journals, like The Journal of the American Medical
Association, have instituted authorship forms that require contributors to
detail their role in an article and to disclose conflicts of interest.
But many journals have yet to take such steps.