FDA is Taking Some Heat....Again

An article in today’s New York Times reports that several FDA scientists have accused the agency of granting market approval to several unsafe medical devices. According to published reports, “the House Committee on Energy and Commerce will investigate the accusations, first aired when eight agency scientists wrote a private letter in May to FDA commissioner Andrew von Eschenbach.”

Unfortunately, the allegations made by the eight scientists against the agency are nothing new. Frequently, agency managers (and sometimes political appointees) lean toward approving drugs or devices when the data pertaining to efficacy and safety are equivocal.

My sources at FDA suggest that this is what happened with approval of Merck’s ill-fated pain medication Vioxx.

Recently, there has been a spate of safety claims made against medical devices manufacturers. This is not surprising because the regulatory hurdles for marketing approval of devices are much lower for devices as compared with drugs and the medical devices and diagnostics business is the fastest growing sector in the life sciences. For an overview of the medical devices and diagnostics industry please read my recent article published in Science Careers.

Hopefully, new leadership at the agency will turn things around!!!!!!!

Until next time…

 

Good Luck and Good Job Hunting!!!!!!!!

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Political Intrigue at 3 Big Pharma Companies

The New York times reported today that Britain’s Serious Fraud Office has demanded documents from GlaxoSmithKline, Astra Zeneca and a British affiliate of Eli Lilly & Company in connections with allegations that the companies paid bribes to secure lucrative drug contracts in Iraq while Saddam Hussein was in power. The 3 companies are accused of violating the United Nations’ oil-for-food program that was instituted in post war Iraq in the 1990s.

A report from the fraud office in 2005 accused some 2,200 companies from 40 countries of colluding with the Hussein regime to cheat the UN program out of about $1.8 billion. As I have stated time and time again, drug companies are no different than other companies–profits and stock prices always come before ethics, morality and sometimes the law!

Until next time….

Good Luck and Good Job Hunting!!!!