It pays to pay

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jayfish101
Posts: 128
Joined: Tue Feb 23, 2016 5:48 pm

It pays to pay

Post by jayfish101 » Thu Jan 11, 2024 6:45 pm

DSM-5 Panel Members Received $14.2M in Industry Funding: Study
Published: Jan 11, 2024 By Tristan Manalac

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Pictured: A woman sits in the dark/iStock, simpson33

Around 60% of physicians who had served as panelists or task force members of the fifth edition of the American Psychiatric Association’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders received payments from industry, according to a study published Wednesday in The BMJ.

Together, these payments totaled $14.2 million and were made to 55 physicians with disclosures on the Open Payments database of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Most of the payments were for food and beverage, reported by 91% of these doctors with ties to the industry, totaling $89,506.7.

Travel was also a major channel of compensation, with cumulative payments of $684,622.2 received by 69.1% of physicians. The BMJ analysis also found that industry paid nearly $1.18 million in consulting fees to more than two-thirds of the doctors.

Nineteen panel members also received a total of $1.83 million in “compensation for services other than consulting,” which could include being a speaker for the company.

“Our study was not designed (nor could it be) to determine if these financial ties affected decision making,” the study authors wrote. Nevertheless, industry influence and financial conflicts of interest “can lead to implicit bias, compromise the research process, and erode public trust."

For instance, a 2017 study published in the journal Social Science & Medicine found that the pharmaceutical industry’s financial incentives could strongly influence the uptake of a new costly drug in the U.S. In states with bans or restrictions on gifts or honoraria, new and more expensive drugs were less likely to be prescribed than in states without such regulations, the authors wrote.

In the BMJ paper, the authors recommend that panelists and working group members who have the authority to make concrete changes, or exert significant influence over the DSM should be free of any ties to the industry as much as possible.

In an accompanying commentary, Lisa Cosgrove, clinical psychologist, professor and faculty fellow at the University of Massachusetts Boston, said that financial conflicts of interest have been a persistent problem for psychiatric medicine. She has worked on several studies in the past and observed that the ties between industry and doctors has not weakened.

She also noted that these conflicts of interest were concentrated in mental illnesses “where drugs are the first line of treatment.”

“A key step to creating trustworthy clinical guidelines is ensuring that they are developed by experts who are free of industry ties,” Cosgrove said. “In the case of the DSM, this recommendation is also important because panel members are able to eliminate disorders—not just add new ones—and thus could play a vital role in tackling overdiagnosis and overtreatment.”

Cosgrove is a senior author on the BMJ paper.

Tristan Manalac is an independent science writer based in Metro Manila, Philippines. He can be reached at tristan@tristanmanalac.com or tristan.manalac@biospace.com.

biopearl123
Posts: 1670
Joined: Fri Jul 20, 2018 5:13 pm

Re: It pays to pay

Post by biopearl123 » Thu Jan 11, 2024 8:12 pm

Jay, thanks for posting. We have discussed previously the unholy marriage of industry and medicine without which not much would be happening over on the clinical trials web site. Psychiatry is particularly terrible since they have so little to work with. Almost no one engages in Freudian analysis these days which just leaves meds and behavioral approaches. Meds of course require companies unless you are Timothy Leary and synthesizing your own. On the flip side are many research project that are funded in a “clean” way without company support. Take a look at QIMR Australia as an example and the NIH here. E.G.:

https://www.qimrberghofer.edu.au/wp-con ... 1T2085.pdf

But look as how many hundreds of millions have been invested by Janssen and Geron into Imetelstat alone. If you included the wasted stem cell projects of yesteryear it would curl your hair. And docs are complicit because continuing medical ed programs are regional and require speakers, labs need funding to test new meds and ideas. And yes most of it comes from industrial (BP) sources. But there is an ethical standard here. Despite the occasional outlier, most medical personal are held to a high standard of honesty and ethics. When we hear the KOL’s present data and give opinions do we cynically look at who paid for their travel or the dinner after their presentation? And if we did would we discount them? The sunshine act is supposed to give us access to exactly these things. Some doctors engage in company sponsored speaking engagements which do certainly look like a way to “reward” those who promulgate the company line. I think Geron is fortunate to have assembled some highly skilled and intelligent researchers and presenters. And yes the support for them is not likely crystal clean. It is our reality.

jayfish101
Posts: 128
Joined: Tue Feb 23, 2016 5:48 pm

Re: It pays to pay

Post by jayfish101 » Fri Jan 12, 2024 12:03 am

Well stated, Biopearl. I have personally been to a number of these pay for use perk vacation/seminars. I nearly was involved in the DSM 5 redo. I am glad my name is not attached to that joke book.

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