Industry Reimbursement for Entering Patients into Clinical Trials: Legal and Ethical Issues
- 15 July 1991
- journal article
- Published by American College of Physicians in Annals of Internal Medicine
- Vol. 115 (2) , 148-151
- https://doi.org/10.7326/0003-4819-115-2-148
Abstract
Pharmaceutical manufacturers commonly contract with clinical investigators for pre-market testing of new products. The per-patient reimbursement offered to the investigator generally exceeds the per-patient costs incurred by the investigator. This excess represents a windfall that can be used to pay for travel, equipment, or supplies, or to fund research for which the investigator cannot obtain funding through peer-reviewed granting channels. This excess raises a potential conflict of interest, because it may lead the investigator to propose experimental treatment for a patient when the patient might be better served by conventional treatment or by no treatment at all. Not only does this situation pose a conflict of interest, it also is a conflict of which few patients are aware and fewer are informed. We propose that all experimental subjects be informed of the source, amount, and mechanism of funding for the experimental treatments they undergo. Further, we propose that payments from pharmaceutical manufacturers for pre-market testing of drugs go to the medical school dean rather than to the individual investigator. With this money, the dean can defray the direct as well as the indirect costs of the clinical study; the remainder, which would otherwise go directly to the investigator, should be placed in a funding pool for which the entire medical school could compete. This solution largely eliminates conflict of interest, addresses informed consent, and reasonably balances the interests of the experimental subject, the clinical investigator, the pharmaceutical manufacturer, and the academic institution.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- : All expenses paid, DoctorThe Lancet, 1990
- Attitudes of Internal Medicine Faculty and Residents Toward Professional Interaction With Pharmaceutical Sales RepresentativesJAMA, 1990
- Physicians and the Pharmaceutical IndustryAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1990
- When Commerce and Academe CollideScience, 1990
- The Human Genome Project: Past, Present, and FutureScience, 1990
- NIH Conflict-of-Interest Guidelines Shot DownScience, 1990
- Federal Funding for AIDS Research: Decision Process and Results in Fiscal Year 1986Clinical Infectious Diseases, 1988
- Source of funding and outcome of clinical trialsJournal of General Internal Medicine, 1986
- Scientific versus commercial sources of influence on the prescribing behavior of physiciansThe American Journal of Medicine, 1982
- Clinical trials in cancer chemotherapyCancer, 1977