Worst Pills, Best Pills

An expert, independent second opinion on more than 1,800 prescription drugs, over-the-counter medications, and supplements

FDA Joins Hands With Industry to Weaken Its Own Rules

Worst Pills, Best Pills Newsletter article February, 2016

In a Dec. 10, 2015, exposé, Inside Health Policy (IHP) revealed details of an Aug. 7 high-level strategy meeting between the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the medical device industry.[1] An FDA background document for the August meeting, obtained by IHP, stated that FDA representatives and AdvaMed, a leading medical device trade association,[2] had worked together on proposed language for the medical device provisions in the 21st Century Cures Act, which the House of...

In a Dec. 10, 2015, exposé, Inside Health Policy (IHP) revealed details of an Aug. 7 high-level strategy meeting between the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the medical device industry.[1] An FDA background document for the August meeting, obtained by IHP, stated that FDA representatives and AdvaMed, a leading medical device trade association,[2] had worked together on proposed language for the medical device provisions in the 21st Century Cures Act, which the House of Representatives passed on July 10.[3] The document further revealed that the FDA and AdvaMed were working together on a Senate version of the bill.

FDA attendees included Dr. Stephen Ostroff, acting FDA commissioner; Dr. Robert Califf, a deputy FDA commissioner and the current nominee to serve as FDA commissioner; and Dr. Jeffrey Shuren, director of the FDA’s medical device division. Industry attendees included the president of AdvaMed and senior officers from three leading medical device companies.[4] A meeting summary stated that AdvaMed thanked Shuren and his team “for meeting with AdvaMed regularly during the legislative process for getting the 21st Century Cures Act passed by the House of Representatives.”[5]

It should be unimaginable that FDA leaders would collude with AdvaMed to write legislation to weaken the agency’s regulatory oversight and approval standards for medical devices. But that is exactly what appears to have happened. The resulting House bill would eviscerate the already far-too-weak safety rules for medical devices.

Defending its collaboration with AdvaMed in drafting legislation chock-full of provisions on the device industry’s wish list, the FDA told IHP that the agency’s meetings with the industry trade group were “standard procedure” and that “Congress requested technical assistance from FDA on the legislation.”[6] While industry has the right to lobby Congress directly, it is unseemly and unacceptable for the FDA to collaborate with regulated industries in drafting laws that would directly affect the regulatory oversight of those industries. No one from the FDA should have been involved in such a process, which violates the most elementary ethical standards. The last person who should have been collaborating with the industry over policy proposals is the person in line to run the agency. Yet Califf did exactly that in the August meeting.

That such collusion between the FDA and industry is “standard procedure” for the agency is alarming. One can only assume that similar FDA collusion takes places with the pharmaceutical industry. This collaboration must cease immediately, and an independent investigation is needed to uncover how such collusion occurred in the first place.

References

[1] Williams J. Internal emails show FDA, industry jointly framed 'Cures' device language. December 10, 2015. Inside Health Policy. http://insidehealthpolicy.com/share/87113. Accessed December 21, 2015.

[2] AdvaMed, Advanced Medical Technology Association. About AdvaMed. http://advamed.org/page/56/about-advamed; Members. http://advamed.org/page/33/members. Accessed December 21, 2015.

[3] Food and Drug Administration. Office of the Commissioner. Agenda and background document for FDA’s external meeting with AdvaMed. August 7, 2011. http://www.citizen.org/documents/FDA-AdvaMed.pdf. Accessed December 21, 2015.

[4] Food and Drug Administration. Memorandum of meeting with AdvaMed. August 7, 2015. http://www.citizen.org/documents/FDA-AdvaMed-Summary.pdf. Accessed December 21, 2015.

[5] Ibid.

[6] Williams J. Internal emails show FDA, industry jointly framed 'Cures' device language. December 10, 2015. Inside Health Policy. http://insidehealthpolicy.com/share/87113. Accessed December 21, 2015.