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The
Attack Dog: The Role of The FDA
http://www.hcvets.com/data/transmission_methods/published_articles/fda_role.htm
Racketeering in Medicine - The Suppression of
Alternatives
by James P. Carter, M.D., Dr. P.H.
"The thing that bugs me is that the people think the FDA
is protecting them. It isn't. What the FDA is doing and
what the public thinks it's doing are as different as
night and day".- Dr. Herbert Ley, FormerFDA
Commissioner, 1970
The FDA was created at the beginning of the century by
government, with input from the AMA, to govern the
safety of foods, drugs and cosmetics. It had no legal
power to test drugs for safety, however. The following
account of the history of the FDA's role has been taken
from a talk entitled "The Rise of the Cult of
Pseudoscience," given by Dr. Charles Harris, a
pathologist, to the American College of Advancement in
Medicine a few years ago.
In 1927, the FDA became a separate agency required to
test drugs for safety. In 1959, Senator Estes Kefauver
(D-Tenn.) launched an investigation into the
pharmaceutical industry which had already been accused
of gouging the public. In the midst of the
investigation, the thalidomide tragedy occurred. Some
historians say this tragedy was significant in that it
slowed the development of new drugs, because of the
additional bureaucracy which resulted. (Actually,
thalidomide remains a useful drug in the treatment of
leprosy; it also stimulates the immune system. Instead
of teaching doctors how to use thalidomide properly, as
it did in the case of the new acne drug Acutane, the FDA
prohibited the use of thalidomide altogether.) Also
during this time, unethical medical research was
uncovered in New York City. Cancer cells were being
inoculated into nursing home patients to determine what
would happen to them, unbeknownst to the patients or
their relatives.
These events caused opposition to human experimentation,
which became severely regulated. A stronger FDA emerged,
which was required to guarantee not only safety, but
effectiveness as well. This meant that human subjects
had to be involved in order to accomplish this.
Otherwise, proof of efficacy would be impossible. The
pharmaceutical companies then began to offer medicines
and monies to the universities to conduct the necessary
clinical trials to show efficacy. The academics began to
worship at the altar of clinical trials. The result,
tragically, was that the double-blind crossover study
became the "double-cross blindover study". . .the real
cult of Pseudo-science was born.
The new rules and regulations pushed by the FDA resulted
in these disadvantages:
Slower development and delivery of new drugs An
intimidated pharmaceutical industry (until they began to
win friends and influence people) Medical services that
had been offered voluntarily in connection with clinical
trials now made mandatory, either executed or enforced
by the FDA Refusal to look at alternatives Sluggish
response times; lost new drug applications; bribery;
indifference; promotion of generics leading to a generic
drug scandal, and a total lack of flexibility
THE AMA CAUGHT RED-HANDED COLLUDING WITH THE FDA
The government-sponsored chelation studies (covered in
an earlier chapter) at Walter Reed and Madigan Army
Hospitals did not originate from any burning desire for
scientific inquiry on the part of the FDA, academia or
pharmaceutical corporations. What, then, motivated them
to help design and approve a controlled study to
evaluate the safety, effectiveness, and dose-response
curve of EDTA in the treatment of peripheral vascular
disease?
The answer lies in the comments of Stuart Nightingale,
Asst. Commissioner for Health Affairs of the FDA, when
he went on record at a meeting of the House of Delegates
of the AMA in Honolulu, Hawaii, seven or eight years
ago, telling AMA delegates, "We can't put these
chelation doctors out of business by ourselves. We have
to work closely with you, the AMA, and other groups, to
put them out of business."
It happened that a leading chelation doctor, Garry
Gordon, was in the audience intending to plead the case
for using chelation in the treatment of arteriosclerosis
and its complications. Dr. Gordon hoped to convince the
AMA to at least allow time for independent scientific
inquiry and to not ban the therapy outright. Dr. Gordon
recorded Dr. Nightingale's remarks and later shared them
with Attorney Greg Seeley, legal counsel for the
chelation doctors' professional organization, AAMP, now
called ACAM. Mr. Seeley observed that the FDA should not
be in the business of putting doctors out of business
for using an approved drug for an unapproved purpose,
which is common medical practice. The attorney drafted a
letter to the FDA protesting Dr. Nightingale's remarks.
He also requested an explanation as to why chelation
doctors should be "put out of business" for treating
heart disease when chelation is already sanctioned as a
medical procedure to remove heavy metal, usually lead
poisoning. Attorney Seeley had the AMA over a legal
barrel.
The FDA reply did not mention the obvious illegality of
Nightingale's remarks, but suggested that a delegation
from AAMP meet with FDA officials to discuss controlled
clinical studies. A working relationship was established
between Dr. Ross Gordon, brother of Dr. Garry Gordon,
and Dr. Lawrence Lepickey, chief of the cardio-renal
division of the FDA. Working together with his
designates, Dr. Ross Gordon developed the research
protocol now being used to evaluate the efficacy of EDTA
in the treatment of peripheral vascular disease and to
determine a dose-response curve. The reader will recall
the statement by Organized Med's mouthpiece, Victor
Herbert, in his Ontario address, "that the most
effective method" of getting rid of a therapy like
chelation therapy is by taking the practitioner to court
and that the second way to fight the problem is "by
lobbying for anti-quack legislation." He added, "In New
York State we are putting them out of business." This
legal strategy has gotten out of hand. The definition of
a quack is too vague and generalized for the courts to
be involved in resolving questions and conflict in
science. The legal system should be used only to stop
someone who is causing harm to the public. The debate
over the safety and effectiveness of chelation therapy
(after nearly 500,000 people have been treated) and the
debate over the safety or toxicity of evening primrose
oil (after some eighteen countries have generally
recognized it as safe, safe enough in fact to be added
to infant formula in Japan) should not be argued in
court.
The Walter Reed Army study will be much larger in scope
than the study that was conducted in Heidelberg, West
Germany, by Dr. Gerhard Schettler and the study
conducted by Dr. Anthony Gotto and his associates at
Baylor University and Methodist Hospital in Houston,
Texas, neither of which has ever been published. The
Danish study published in August, 1991, as we have seen,
is patently flawed in that there was obvious
manipulation of the sample study. Dr. Efrain Olszewer
and I published our study in the April, 1990, issue of
the Journal of the National Medical Association.
Dr. Lepickey has also remarked that Dr. Gotto should not
have conducted his independent study without clearing it
with him and others in the Cardiorenal Division of the
FDA. This is strange. Isn't respected, competent Dr.
Gotto, researcher and administrator, capable of doing
his own research?
When all of the studies have been completed, most likely
a meta- analysis will be performed. This type of
analysis determines mathematically what the weight or
preponderance of the evidence shows, an unnecessary
hassle to determine what should have been obvious at
first glance. The investigations and expenditures are
unavoidable in a scientific and legal sense, however, as
long as "liars can figure" and as long as people like
Victor Herbert can be paid by Organized Med to haul
practitioners into court on accusations of fraud,
pretending to argue valid science before naive and
scientifically-illiterate panels and judges.
THE GENERIC DRUG SCANDAL - THE TIP OF THE ICEBERG
The American Academy of Family Physicians warned in 1989
that generic drugs may at times be inferior, even
dangerous, especially for persons with asthma, diabetes,
or heart disease. Nevertheless, generic drugs are now an
annual $3 billion dollar industry.
The FDA branch chief for generic drugs, Mr. Gerald
Chang, accepted thousands of dollars in illegal pay-offs
from generic drug companies, whose applications he
approved. He facilitated those who paid him off and
inhibited the others. Mylan Labs Pharmaceuticals became
suspicious because its drugs were not getting approved.
The CEO for Mylan, Mr. Roy McNight, hired a private
detective who conducted a one-year surveillance, which
included going through Chang's garbage, to find evidence
of this government scandal. They found plenty! Companies
had submitted fake data and cheated, and there were
pay-offs. The generic company Vitarin sent in bogus data
and submitted the original drug for testing, claiming it
was their generic version. The FDA system of approving
generic drugs was subverted by the very industry it was
supposed to regulate.
This scandal certainly raises questions about the safety
and effectiveness of generic drugs and how they are
regulated. A generic drug is usually a discount-version
of the name-brand drug. The generic supposedly uses the
same active ingredient as the name-brand. However, some
companies substituted brand-name drugs for their own
generic brands, just to get FDA approval; then they
proceeded to manufacture poor quality and/or ineffective
generic substitutes. One-third of all drugs sold in the
U.S. today are generic. The generics industry claims to
offer the same quality as brand-name drugs, at
substantially lower prices. Certainly there are ethical
generic companies now under serious question, but the
challenge lies in determining who cheats and who
doesn't.
Congressman John Dingle's sub-committee conducted the
investigation and broke the story. In June, 1990, Marvin
Seife, the former head of the FDA's generic drug
division, was the fifth FDA official to be indicted by a
federal grand jury on charges of perjury. This
indictment resulted from a two-year investigation of
improprieties between FDA officials and generic
companies. Four of Seife's former employees at FDA have
already been convicted on corruption and racketeering
charges. Five industry executives, three companies and
one consultant have been convicted of similar charges.
Some thirty generics were asked to re-submit abbreviated
New Drug Applications. Other evidence uncovered refusal
of the FDA to hear complaints coming in from generic
companies who were playing it straight and not getting
their drugs approved.
The Division of Generic Drugs, in this instance, was
guilty of criminal misbehavior. Congressman Dingle
stated he could not "vouch for the safety of generics."
Former FDA Commissioner Frank Young re-organized the
Generic Division, prior to leaving office, uncovering
more evidence of fraud, bribery, substitution, and false
reporting. Where does it end? Not with the Generic Drug
Division. Read on, please.
ADVICE FROM THE PRESIDENTIAL ADVISORS PANEL, 1990
In August, 1990, a Presidential Advisory Panel reported
to President Bush at the White House that the federal
government should speed up approval of experimental AIDS
and cancer drugs, by requiring less evidence of
effectiveness before they are put on the market. The
chairman of the nine-member advisory panel was Dr. Lewis
Lasagna, Dean of the School of the Graduate Biomedical
Sciences at Tufts University. Dr. Lasagna warned that
thousands of lives are lost each year from delays in
approvals and marketing of AIDS and cancer drugs.
The report stated, "Desperately ill patients are
prepared to accept the greater risk inherent in the use
of such medications. Faced with the consequences of a
lack of therapy for AIDS and cancer, an expanded
mechanism for early access to investigational drugs is
morally, ethically and scientifically justified." Dr.
Lasagna and the panel suggested that approval of a new
drug could be postponed until after the drug is on the
market, provided two types of studies are done first.
One study measures the effectiveness of new drugs in
comparison with those which are already on the market;
the second assesses whether or not a given drug prolongs
life. The panel recommended that the government should
not insist that a drug company demonstrate "prolongation
of life, if a drug can improve the quality of a
patient's life."
"For cancer and AIDS patients, time is running out, and
they are understandably upset with delays in obtaining
the pharmacotherapy which represents their only hope,"
the panel noted. For these life-threatening diseases, it
added, the government should approve new drugs at the
earliest possible point in their development, and, in
any event, earlier than previous time frames.
At a subsequent news conference, Dr. Lasagna pointed out
that the FDA often demands more data than are required
by either federal law or scientific criteria for judging
the value of new drugs.
It now takes twelve years and costs $231 million to
research, test, and get approval for a new drug,
according to a Tufts University study which was released
in the spring of 1990. This report by the Center for the
Study of Drug Development noted that, even accounting
for inflation, this estimate is twice what the Center
had found when it did a similar study in 1979. The Tufts
study was based on a random selection of ninety-three
drugs developed by twelve pharmaceutical firms and
tested on humans between 1970 and 1982. The cost figures
were then adjusted for inflation to 1987 dollars.
Both Congressman Waxman of California and Congressman
Wyden of Oregon were critical of the FDA in 1990. They
described a steadily deteriorating ability of the Agency
to carry out its mission and functions. During the
previous decade, the Agency was underfunded and
understaffed; there was a lack of information and a lack
of independence. This set the stage for the generic drug
scandal. Congressman Wyden accused the agency of putting
politics before science.
These criticisms are only the tip of the iceberg.
Further congressional scrutiny into the agency's
association with drug companies is certainly warranted
from the evidence surfacing. Why do representatives from
drug companies make up more than 50% of some FDA
drug-advisory boards? This creates a bias in favor of
prescription and over-the-counter (OTC) medicines over
natural remedies or herbal products.
The new Food and Drug Commissioner, David Kessler, has
been given a mandate to (1) develop food labeling
guidelines and (2) increase the Agency's scrutiny over
medical devices. Although laudable, these objectives
have nothing to do with the change that is needed in the
agency's orientation - from working for the industry it
is supposed to regulate, to working objectively for
medical advances in the best interests of those who pay
FDA salaries, the American taxpayer.
In addition, if the proposed new regulations for medical
claims for foods are any indication, then the Agency
appears to be going backwards in regard to their first
mandate. They are proposing that only two foods and/or
nutrients be recognized as having a direct effect on the
occurrence of disease: (1) calcium (osteoporosis), and
(2) dietary fat (cardiovascular disease and cancer).
The first of these is probably not even a direct effect
in terms of treatment or prevention. The fact that they
consider all of the other relevant research on nutrition
and health inadequate for making clinical claims
suggests that, as least as far as food labeling is
concerned, business is worse than usual. These decisions
are obviously not based on science. The pharmaceutical
boys just don't want to open the door to this kind of
competition, and they are using their FDA lackeys to
help keep it shut. Only a public outcry and/or pressure
from Congress and the White House can turn this
situation around.
The late comedian Lenny Bruce's takeoff on an American
politician, "I'm not a crook - elect me!" came to mind
when Dr. Kessler took over the FDA in November, 1990,
and said, "I am not going to protect crooks." Jack
Anderson, in his commentary "High Noon for the New
Sheriff at the FDA," noted that this was something most
federal agency heads don't have to say when they take
the job. Anderson commented, "[when Kessler takes over]
it should be something like grabbing the helm of the
Exxon Valdez after it hit the bottom."
Dr. Kessler's predecessor, Frank Young, had been forced
to resign after the generic drug scandal surfaced under
his watch in 1989. The agency's credibility was at an
all-time low. It was accused of prematurely approving
life-support medical devices, and allegations also
surfaced that FDA agents were using insider information
on drug approvals to play the stock market.
Anderson's congressional sources provided this insider
observation: "There is a big concern on Capitol Hill
that Kessler doesn't get captured by any of the bad
elements that linger on in the FDA." They went on to say
that he should let it be known "that there's a new
sheriff in town." His tolerance for the old way of doing
business at the FDA remains to be seen. No one should
hold his breath, however. This is probably bigger than
what one man can do, no matter how well-intentioned.
Racketeering in Medicine: The Suppression of
Alternatives Copyright © 1992, 1993 by James P. Carter,
M.D., Dr. P.H. Published by Hampton Roads Publishing
Company, Inc.891 Norfolk Square, Norfolk, VA 23502.
Tel.: (804) 459-2453 Fax: (804) 455-8907. ISBN: 1-
878901-31-X
THE FEDERAL DRUG ADMINISTRATION
In
the late 1950's Dr. Henry Welch, head of the FDA's
division of antibiotics was paid-off $287,000 from drug
companies he was supposed to regulate.
In 1964 the FDA filed a lawsuit against Andrew Ivy, Vice
President and Professor of physiology at the University
of Illinois. Ivy was the elite of mainstream medicine in
the US at the time with impeccable credentials. The
moment he advocated an alternative treatment, Krebiozen,
he was branded a quack overnight. Over 20,000 cancer
patients had allegedly benefited from Krebiozen. After
289 days at trial, and admitted purjured testimony from
one doctor, Ivy and three co-defendants were acquitted
of all 240 counts. Krebiozen was never properly
investigated.
FDA commissioner (in the 1960's) James Goddard
persecuted a potentially excllent drug, DMSO, a simple
molecule which often brought pain relief. Positive
studies by scientists numbered in the 1000's but he did
not care. A drug company executive supposedly told the
leading DMSO researcher, from "The Healing of Cancer",
"I don't care if it is the major drug of our century-and
we all know it is-it isn't worth it to us."
Apparently it would have threatened too many other
profitable drug lines. A few years after leaving the FDA
Goddard became Chairman of the board of Ormont Drug and
Chemical company.
In 1969 the US Congress study found that 37 of 49 top
FDA officials moved to high corporate positions in
companies they were previously supposedly regulating.
In 1970, former FDA commissioner Dr. Herbert Ley said,
"The thing that bugs me is that the people think the FDA
is protecting them. It isn't. What the FDA is doing and
what the public thinks it is doing are as different as
night and day."
A 1975 GAO study found 150 FDA officials owned stock in
the companies they were supposed to regulate. In 1975,
an independent government evaluation found massive
conflicts of interest among the FDA's top personnel.
According to a Tuft's University study released in 1990,
it now takes 12 years and costs 231 million dollars to
research, test and obtain approval for a new drug. Along
with the requisite mountain of paperwork. As is typical
with all government bureaucrats, they demand copious
amounts of paperwork to protect themselves if their
decision is proven wrong. Meanwhile important drugs are
held up for years or are never investigated due to the
enormous cost and time involved.
The FDA's generic drug scandal hit the news in 1989.
Some companies were obtaining fast approvals for their
drugs from the FDA while others were delayed for years.
The CEO of one company hired a private detective to
investigate why some companies received approvals and
his was not.
They found that several FDA reviewers were accepting
bribes from some drug companies to speed their drugs
through the process and derail those submitted by
competing companies. Eventually 42 persons and ten
companies were found guilty of criminal acts.
A battle being fought now epitomizes how far the FDA
will go in order to protect the drug companies profits.
For over eleven months Jim and Donna Navarro have fought
the FDA for the right to give their five year old son,
Thomas, an alternative treatment. Thomas suffers with
Medulloblastoma, a type of malignant brain cancer. After
surgery, chemotherapy was recommended. Jim and Donna
asked what the side-effects were;
...Fluid on the middle ear, hearing loss, memory loss,
hyperthyroidism, spinal growth deficit..." the list went
on. Worse, permanent retardation. Jim and Donna
researched their sons cancer for thousands of hours.
They found Dr. Burzynski?s treatment (antineoplastons)
in Houston, that has had some very good success with
this type of brain cancer, with minimal short term side
effects.
The FDA refuses to allow Burzysnki to treat Thomas until
he has undergone chemotherapy and radiation treatment
first. Jim and Donna pleaded with the FDA commissioner
Jane Henney, her superior Donna Shalala and several
politicians, all to no avail. The FDA would rather see
Thomas Navarro dead than taking the medicine of his
parents choice.
The FDA's motives are explicitly clear. Prominent FDA
officials protect the pharmaceutical companies profit
margins and are later rewarded with lucrative positions
within those same companies. As Burzysnki says;
"The past commissioner of the FDA-now he is an official
of one of the large pharmaceutical companies, with a
salary of 2 million a year."
The Cancer Racket
THE FEDERAL DRUG ADMINISTRATION
Recently the FDA is trying to police the Internet and
close down any alternative treatment websites. According
to William Falloon the FDA wanted to set-up a rapid
response team to identify, investigate and prosecute
websites. As Falloon says, the FDA is seeking to
establish an army of cyberspace storm troopers to enable
it to shut down large numbers of websites quickly.They
wanted to spend a million dollars a year on artificial
intelligence computer robots that would scan the
internet for phrases such as "prevents cancer" and
"prescription drug" so the FDA could swiftly gather the
infomration needed to prosecute.
This would be hilarious if it didn't pose such a serious
threat to our freedom of choice, freedom of speech and
freedom of the Internet. I don't need the "nanny State"
micromanaging my life and telling me, oh-so-kindly, that
they know what's best. That is statism, if you like it,
emmigrate to Beijing.
This is what you get when you allow corrupt,
out-of-control government bureacracies to have unlimited
power to do whatever they want. The FDA is staffed with
unprincipled tyrants who wield far more power than they
should ever have. The FDA's history is one of serving
the career goals and political interests of key
officials. They know where their bread is buttered, and
that is enforcing the agenda of man-made patentable
drugs.
In 1970 Dr. Charles Edwards, commissioner of the FDA
said, "(It is) not our (FDA) policy to jeopardize the
financial interests of the pharmaceutical companies."
That's right Charles, the FDA protects the drug
companies monopoly by sytematically suppressing any and
all natural or unprofitable alternatives. Thirty years
later, nothing has changed.
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