Schering, Merck Spent $60 Million On Medical Education For Doctors
September 14 2009 - 5:02PM
Dow Jones News
Merck & Co. (MRK) and Schering-Plough Corp. (SGP), makers of
the controversial cholesterol drug Vytorin, spent roughly $60
million over four years on classes to help doctors learn the latest
practices and treatment options for heart disease.
The payments, disclosed in a report released by the Senate
Special Committee on Aging, were given to a host of top medical
schools such as Harvard University and leading health groups like
the American Heart Association. The practice, under review in
Congress, raises questions about how pharmaceutical industry money
is directed in a way that could influence doctors' prescribing
habits. A handful of payments, which spanned January 2004 to
January 2008, were over $1 million.
Merck, Schering-Plough and some recipients of the money say the
payments are essential to helping doctors keep up with new and
evolving sciences. In a practice called Continuing Medical
Education, or CME, doctors take classes and training courses to
stay current on the best ways to treat patients. Many states and
hospitals require doctors to take such classes.
Ronald Rogers, a spokesman for Merck, said the company believes
funding these education courses is "about helping physicians take
better care of their patients and achieving improved health
outcomes whether using our therapies, other companies' therapies or
no therapies at all."
He said the company has no control over the content of the
courses or the speakers.
Still, Congress is drafting legislation to get companies to
disclose the payments routinely amid concerns pharmaceutical money
for continuing medical education is being used to promote
particular products.
"These documents remove any doubt that, at least in this case,
when drug companies fund continuing medical education, they see it
as money well spent on marketing their latest blockbuster drug,"
said Sen. Herb Kohl, D.-Wis., chairman of the Special Committee on
Aging.
Kohl, along with Sen. Chuck Grassley, R.-Iowa, has been trying
to garner support for getting language in Senate health-care
legislation to require companies to disclose these payments. Kohl
is hopeful health care legislation scheduled to be released this
week by the Senate Finance Committee will include such
requirements. Bills in the House would require the disclosures.
Lawmakers haven't found evidence that the payments influence
doctors' prescribing habits or views of a particular drug or
company.
The American College of Cardiology, for instance, received
$85,000 in late 2007 and early 2008 from Schering-Plough to support
educating doctors about cardiovascular diseases and obesity. At the
group's annual meeting in March 2008, a panel of cardiologists came
out against the company's drug Vytorin, telling doctors to sharply
reduce their use of the medicine. The company took issue with the
panel's recommendation but the cardiologists' opinion stands.
Vytorin is a combination of Merck's Zocor and Zetia, which was
developed by Schering-Plough. The companies market the drug through
a joint venture and have agreed to merge.
Amy Murphy, a spokeswoman for the American College of
Cardiology, a 36,000-member nonprofit medical society, said it has
received $309,000 from Merck/Schering-Plough to educate
cardiologists since the beginning of 2009. She noted that companies
that give money don't have control over what is discussed.
The payments Merck and Schering-Plough disclosed to Congress
included the amount given, dates and a brief description of what
the money was for, making it hard to determine exactly what the
money was spent on. The data only included payments for continuing
medical education related to Vytorin and cholesterol and
cardiovascular risk management. Continuing medical education
payments for other products or diseases weren't included.
Most payments went to a clearly identifiable entity, such as the
George Washington University Medical Office, which received
$884,650 from Merck in 2004 and 2005 as part of a "3rd Party"
continuing medical education initiative. The largest payment by
either companies was $5,029,723, given from 2004 to 2005 to the
"Health Science Center." The entity is a third-party, accredited
provider of education services to doctors, and the companies don't
have any control over what specific education courses the money is
used for, Merck's Rogers said.
Congress has said Vytorin, a cholesterol drug with sales of
$2.36 billion in 2008, is a prime example of why there needs to be
more transparency on payments from the pharmaceutical industry to
doctors, universities and advocacy groups. Several committees in
the House and Senate have been investigating Vytorin's safety and
marketing.
The two pharmaceuticals earlier this month agreed to pay $41.5
million to settle lawsuits accusing them of marketing their
cholesterol drugs Vytorin and Zetia in a misleading manner and
failing to disclose the results of a negative clinical trial in a
timely fashion.
-By Jared A. Favole, Dow Jones Newswires; 202.862.9207;
jared.favole@dowjones.com