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Ten Doctors on FDA Panel Reviewing Abbott Heart Device Had Financial Ties With Company
A photo of a sign with the FDA's logo in front of its headquarters.
A sign for the Food And Drug Administration outside of its headquarters on July 20, 2020, in White Oak, Maryland. (Sarah Silbiger/Getty Images)

Ten Doctors on FDA Panel Reviewing Abbott Heart Device Had Financial Ties With Company

When the FDA recently convened a committee of advisers to assess a cardiac device made by Abbott, the agency didn鈥檛 disclose that most of them had received payments from the company or conducted research it had funded 鈥 information readily available in a federal database.

One member of the FDA advisory committee was linked to hundreds of payments from Abbott totaling almost $200,000, according to a database maintained by the Department of Health and Human Services. Another was connected to 100 payments totaling about $100,000 and conducted research supported by about $50,000 from Abbott. A third member of the committee worked on research supported by more than $180,000 from the company.

The government database, called 鈥,鈥 records financial relationships between doctors and certain other health care providers and the makers of drugs and medical devices. 蘑菇影院 Health News found records of Abbott payments associated with 10 of the 14 voting members of the FDA advisory panel, which was weighing clinical evidence for a heart device called TriClip G4 System. The money, paid from 2016 through 2022 鈥 the most recent year for which the database shows payments 鈥 adds up to about $650,000.

The panel voted almost unanimously that the benefits of the device outweigh its risks. Abbott announced on April 2 that the FDA had approved TriClip, which is designed to treat leakage from the heart鈥檚 tricuspid valve.

The Abbott payments illustrate the reach of medical industry money and the limits of transparency at the FDA. They also shed light on how the agency weighs relationships between people who serve on its advisory panels and the makers of drugs and medical devices that those committees review as part of the regulatory approval process.

The payments do not reflect wrongdoing on the part of the agency, its outside experts, or the device manufacturer. The database does not show that any of the payments were related directly to the TriClip device.

But some familiar with the process, including people who have served on FDA advisory committees, said the payments should have been disclosed at the Feb. 13 meeting 鈥 if not as a regulatory requirement, then in the interest of transparency, because the money might call into question committee members鈥 objectivity.

鈥淭his is a problem,鈥 Joel Perlmutter, a former FDA advisory committee member and a professor of neurology at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, said by email. 鈥淭hey should or must disclose this due to bias.鈥

The records several kinds of payments from drug and device makers. One category, called 鈥渁ssociated research funding,鈥 supports research in which a physician is named a principal investigator in the database. Another category, called 鈥済eneral payments,鈥 includes consulting fees, travel expenses and meals connected to physicians in the database. The money can flow from manufacturers to third parties, such as hospitals, universities, or other corporate entities, but the database explicitly connects doctors by name to the payments.

At the to consider the TriClip device, an FDA official announced that committee members had been screened for potential financial conflicts of interest and found in compliance with government requirements.

FDA spokesperson Audra Harrison said by email that the agency doesn鈥檛 comment on matters related to individual advisory committee members.

鈥淭he FDA followed all appropriate procedures and regulations in vetting these panel members and stands firmly by the integrity of the disclosure and vetting processes in place,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his includes ensuring advisory committee members do not have, or have the appearance of, a conflict of interest.鈥

Abbott 鈥渉as no influence over who is selected to participate in FDA advisory committees,鈥 a spokesperson for the company, Brent Tippen, said in a statement.

Diana Zuckerman, president of the National Center for Health Research, a think tank, said the FDA shouldn鈥檛 have allowed recipients of funding from Abbott in recent years to sit in judgment of the Abbott product. The agency takes too narrow a view of what should be disqualifying, she said.

One committee member was Craig Selzman, chief of the Division of Cardiothoracic Surgery at the University of Utah. The Open Payments database connects to Selzman about $181,000 in associated research funding from Abbott to the University of Utah Hospitals & Clinics.

Asked in an interview if a reasonable person could question the impartiality of committee members based on the Abbott payments, Selzman said: 鈥淧eople from the outside looking in would probably say yes.鈥

He noted that Abbott鈥檚 money went to the university, not to him personally. Participating in industry-funded clinical trials benefits doctors professionally, he said. He added: 鈥淭here鈥檚 probably a better way to provide transparency.鈥

The FDA has a history of appointing people to advisory committees who had relationships with manufacturers of the products under review. For example, in 2020, the doctor who chaired an FDA advisory committee had been a Pfizer consultant.

Appearance Issues

FDA advisory committee candidates, selected to provide expert advice on often complicated drug and device applications, must complete a confidential disclosure report that asks about current and past financial interests as well as 鈥渁nything that would give an 鈥榓ppearance鈥 of a conflict.鈥

The FDA has discretion to decide whether someone with an 鈥渁ppearance issue鈥 can serve on a panel, according to a guidance document posted on the agency鈥檚 website. Relationships more than a year in the past generally don鈥檛 give rise to appearance problems, according to the document, unless they suggest close ties to a company or involvement with the product under review. The main question is whether financial interests would cause a reasonable person to question the member鈥檚 impartiality, the document says.

The FDA draws a distinction between appearance issues and financial conflicts of interest. Conflicts of interest occur when someone chosen to serve on an advisory committee has financial interests that 鈥渕ay be impacted鈥 by their work on the committee, says.

If the FDA finds a conflict of interest but still wants the applicant on a panel, it can issue a public waiver. None of the panelists voting on TriClip received a waiver.

The FDA鈥檚 approach to disclosure contrasts with at which doctors earn credit for continuing medical education. For example, for a recent conference in Boston on technology for treatment of heart failure, including TriClip, the group holding the meeting directed speakers to include in their slide presentations disclosures .

Those disclosures 鈥 naming companies from which speakers had received consulting fees, grant support, travel expenses, and the like 鈥 also appeared on the conference website.

Unbridled Enthusiasm

The FDA has designated TriClip a 鈥渂reakthrough鈥 device with 鈥渢he potential to provide more effective treatment or diagnosis of a life-threatening or irreversibly debilitating disease鈥 compared with current treatments, an agency official, Megan Naber, .

Naber said that for breakthrough devices, the 鈥渢otality of data must still provide a reasonable assurance of safety and effectiveness鈥 but the FDA 鈥渕ay be willing to accept greater uncertainty鈥 about the balance of risks and benefits.

In a for the advisory committee, FDA staff pointed out findings from a clinical trial that didn鈥檛 reflect well on TriClip. For example, patients treated with TriClip had 鈥渘umerically higher鈥 mortality and heart failure hospitalization rates during the 12 months after the procedure compared with a control group, according to the report. Tippen, the Abbott spokesperson, didn鈥檛 respond to a request for comment on those findings.

The committee voted 14-0 that TriClip was safe for its intended use. The panel voted 12-2 that the device was effective, and it voted 13-1 that the benefits of TriClip outweighed the risks.

The committee member to whom the database attributes the most money from Abbott, Paul Hauptman, cast one of the votes against the device on effectiveness and the sole vote against the device on the bottom-line question of its risks versus benefits.

Hauptman said during the meeting that the question of safety was 鈥渧ery, very clear鈥 but added: 鈥淚 just felt the need to pull back a little bit on unbridled enthusiasm.鈥 Who will benefit from the device, he said, 鈥渘eeds better definition.鈥

Hauptman, dean of the University of Nevada-Reno School of Medicine, is connected to 268 general payments from Abbott in the Open Payments database. Some payments are listed as going to an entity called Keswick Cardiovascular.

Hauptman said in an email that he followed FDA guidance and added, 鈥淢y impartiality speaks for itself based on my vote and critical comments.鈥

Some committee members voted in favor of the device despite concerns.

Marc Katz, chief of the Division of Cardiothoracic Surgery at the Medical University of South Carolina, is linked to 77 general about $53,000 from Abbott and worked on research supported by about $10,000 from the company, according to Open Payments.

鈥淚 voted yes for safety, no for effectiveness, but then caved and voted yes for the benefits outweighing the risks,鈥 he said in the meeting.

In an email, he said of his Abbott payments: 鈥淎ll was disclosed and reviewed by the FDA.鈥 He said that he 鈥渃an be impartial鈥 and that he 鈥渙penly expressed 鈥 concerns about the treatment.鈥

Mitchell Krucoff, a professor at Duke University School of Medicine, is connected to 100 general about $105,000. Some went to a third party, HPIC Consulting. He also worked on research supported by about $51,000 from Abbott, according to Open Payments.

He said during the meeting that he voted in favor of the device on all three questions and added that doctors have 鈥渁 lot to learn鈥 once it鈥檚 on the market. For instance: By using the device to treat patients now, 鈥渄o we set people up for catastrophes later?鈥

In an email, Krucoff said he completed a 鈥渧ery thorough conflict of interest screening by FDA for this panel,鈥 which focused not only on Abbott but also on 鈥渁ny work done/payments received from any other manufacturer with devices in this space.鈥

John Hirshfeld Jr., an emeritus professor of medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, is linked by the database to six general payments from Abbott . Two of the payments linked to him went to a nonprofit, the Cardiovascular Research Foundation, according to the database. He voted yes on all three questions about TriClip but said at the meeting that he 鈥渨ould have liked to have seen more rigorous data to support efficacy.鈥

In an email, Hirshfeld said he disclosed the payments to the FDA. The agency did not deem him to have a conflict because he had no stake in Abbott鈥檚 success and his involvement with the company had ended, he said. Through the conflict-of-interest screening process, he said, he had been excluded from prior advisory panels.