Philip Morris
Pro-Free Enterprise Group Challenges FDA's Authority to Regulate Drug Companies' Speech
Fields
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- Skolnick, A.A.
- Type
- MAGA, MAGAZINE ARTICLE
- Area
- NICOLI,DAVID/OFFICE
- Attachment
- 2046936799/2046936802
- Site
- W6
- Request
- Stmn/R1-072
- Stmn/R1-079
- Named Person
- Adams, D.
- Bennett, D.R.
- Bewley, P.
- Hutt, P.B.
- Samp, R.
- Shickman, M.
- Bennett, D.R.
- Document File
- 2046936725/2046937271/Missing
- Named Organization
- Amed, American Medical Association
- Chief Counsel
- Cme
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- FDA, Food and Drug Administration
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- General Counsel
- Harvard Law School
- Johnson Johnson
- Journal of the American Medical Assn
- Pro Free Enterprise Group
- Supreme Court
- Ucla
- Wlf, Washington Legal Foundation
- 4th Natl Conference on Cme Provider Indu
- Chief Counsel
- Author (Organization)
- Journal of the American Medical Assn
- Litigation
- Stmn/Produced
- Master ID
- 2046936726/6992
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t
The Journal of the Amencan Medlcal Assoaetan
February 2, 1994
Pro-Free Enterprise Group Challenges FDA's
Authority to Regulate Drug Companies' Speech
THE US Food and Drug Administra-
tion (FDA) has indefinitely postponed
the publication of its long-awaited final
policy statement on industry-supported
scientific and educational activities.
The FDA has delayed issuing its final
guidelines-which were supposed to be
published by the end of 1993-in order
to answer a "civil petition" filed by a
"pro-free enterprise" group that is chal-
lenging the agency's legal authority to
regulate the speech of pharmaceutical
and medical device manufacturers.
The Washington, DC-based group,
called the Washington Legal Founda-
tion, is asking the FDA to cease "vio-
lating the First Amendment rights" of
physicians and patients who have an ur-
gent need for timely information about
these products.
The foundation's petition, filed on Oc-
tober 22, asks the FDA "to withdraw its
draft policy ["Draft Policy on Industry-
Supported Scientific and Educational
Activities," Federal Register. Novem-
ber 27, 1992] and to refrain from taking
any enforcement action against manu-
facturers that sponsor scientific or edu-
cational activities or distribute medical
textbooks that discuss off-label uses of
approved drugs. The petition also asks
the FDA to "formally adopt a policy
that recognizes the important role played
by off-label uses of approved drugs and
medical devices in the proper adminis-
tration of health care in this country."
The FDA's draft policy on industry-
supported scientific and educational ac-
tivities was developed to prevent manu-
facturers from unduly influencing the
content of continuing medical education
(CME) programs (JAMA. 1991;266:
2947).
Nevertheless, unless the FDA aban-
dons this policy, the Washington Legal
Foundation will take the agency to court,
says its chief counsel, Richard Samp.
The foundation, which describes it-
self as "a pro-free enterprise public in-
terest law and policy center with more
than 100000 members and supporters
nationwide," says it filed the petition
not on behalf of the pharmaceutical in-
dustry but "on behalf of doctors and
medical patients who wish to receive
information about off-label uses of FDA-
approved drugs and medical devices."
The foundation, says Samp, "devotes
a substantial portion of its resources to
defending the rights of individuals and
businesses to go about their affairs with-
332 JAMA Feoruarv 2 1994-Vol 271 No 5
out undue interference from government
regulators."
The foundation claims that the FDA's
"restrictions on dissemination of truth-
ful information regarding lawful uses of
FDA-approved drugs and medical de-
vices violate the First Amendment
rights of both providers and would-be
recipients of such information, and that
such restrictions are in excess of FDA's
statutory authority (which is limited to
regulation of labeling of drugs and medi-
cal devices)."
'Endangers Uves'
According to the petition, the FDA's
conduct in recent years suggests that
the agency "has a strong aversion to the
dissemination of information regarding
off-label uses of drugs and medical de-
vices; that in its 'perfect world' [the]
FDA would prohibit all such informa-
tion flow."
"The FDA has threatened severe
sanctions against manufacturers who be-
come actively involved in scientific and
educational programs at which off-label
uses of the manufacturer's drugs or
medical devices are to be discussed,"
Samp says. The FDA's draft policy state-
ment "imposes severe restrictions on
manufacturer involvement in such pro-
grams. The result is that many such
programs are being canceled, and doc-
tors are not receiving vital information
about recognized off-label uses of FDA-
approved drugs and medical devices."
The petition states: "Manufacturers
should not be subject to sanctions sim-
ply because, in furtherance of their eco-
nomic self-interest, they assist in the
dissemination of truthful information re-
garding unapproved uses for their prod-
ucts. [The] FDA is authorized, of course,
to prevent manufacturers from mis-
branding their products by including un-
approved uses on products labels; but
FDA has stretched its 'labeling' author-
ity far beyond anything contemplated
by Congress in adopting the federal
Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act."
"The FDA's violations of basic First
Amendment rights are needlessly en-
dangering the lives of countless Ameri-
cans who depend on off-label use of FDA-
approved drugs for their very survival,"
Samp says.
"The great majority of recognized
treatments of childhood cancers consist
of administering FDA-approved drugs
for off-label uses. But as a result of FDA's
restrictions on publicizing such off-label
uses, information regarding effective
treatment often is delayed in reaching
other physicians who are treating child-
hood cancers."
"The incidence of cancer among in-
fants and children is very low compared
with the incidence of cancer among
adults," says the foundation's petition.
"It is not economically feasible for a com-
pany that has developed a cancer drug
to undertake the extremely time-con-
suming and expensive clinical trials nec-
essary to obtain FDA approval for ad-
ministering the drug to children. As a
result, many drugs that reach the mar-
ket based on demonstrated efficacy
against adult cancers never acquire
FDA-approved labeling for pediatric use.
Nonetheless, such drugs are frequently
found by pediatric oncologists to be
highly effective against the cancers of
children."
Indeed, according to Donald R. Ben-
nett, MD, PhD, director of the Ameri-
can Medical Association's Division of
Drugs and Toxicology, 40% to 50% of all
drugs are prescribed for off-label uses.
Sixty percent to 70% of drug regimens
used in the treatment of cancer and 80%
to 90% of pharmaceuticals used in pe-
diatrics are for purposes not yet ap-
proved by the FDA.
Pharmaceutical Industry's View
Speaking at the Fourth National Con-
ference on CME Provider-Industry Col-
laboration, held in Washington, DC, in
October, Peter Bewley. JD, associate
general counsel for Johnson & Johnson,
New Brunswick, NJ, provided a view
that appears to be shared by many in
the pharmaceutical industry.
That pharmaceutical companies do not
use the First Amendment to defend
themselves against the FDA should not
encourage the FDA to disregard the
First Amendment in formulating regu-
latory policies, Bewley says. "The stakes
are usually so high-companies often
are threatened with seizure of millions
of dollars of inventory-that most com-
panies would rather settle than litigate."
According to Bewley, "The basic ra-
tionale for the First Amendment is that
no one person or group has a lock on the
truth. Truth is best sened by open dis-
cussion where the views of many can be
considered.tested,and accepted or re-
jected. Indeed, we should be most fear-
Medical News & PerspecUves

4
S
S
ful when the government tries to tell us
what the truth is and attempts to pro-
hibit us from talking about different pos-
sible truths.
"Health care reform requires a much
more efficient mechanism for dissemi-
nating scientific information," he say=_.
"We must meet the information needs
of the health care community as we move
toward universal coverage and managed
competition in health care delivery.
"The constitution does not permit and
health reform cannot endure allowing a
single, small group of enforcement of-
ficials'at the FDA to continue to inter-
fere with the dissemination by manu-
facturers of truthful information about
advances in medical sciences. The FDA
policy creates high, artificial, and un-
necessary barriers to prompt dissemi-
nation of this kind of information. We
must get the FDA out of the loop." Be-
wley says.
FDA Reviewing Petition
According to David Adams, JD, FDA
deputy commissioner for policy, Rock-
ville, Md, the agency must respond to
the issues raised in the civil petition
before it can release its final policy state-
ment. The petition is being reviewed, he
says, and until the review is completed,
the agency cannot comment on the pe-
titioner's objections ar.d requests. By
law, the FDA must d.::auu lb0
days of receiving the petition; however,
it may respond more quickly than that,
Adams says.
Considering the extreme views ex-
pressed in the petition, it is not likely
that the FDA will be willing or able to
satisfy the foundation's demands. In the
event of a lawsuit. the foundation's ex-
treme position is not likely to prevail,
says at least one authority on the U S
Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, the fed-
eral law that requires the FDA to regu-
late drug labeling.
Commercial Speech Not So Free
The foundation a.dmi+,s t,har the T-iS
Supreme Court has differentiated be-
tween commercial and noncommercial
speech and has allowed the government
to regulate commercial speech under cer-
tain circumstances. However, its peti-
tion claims that "much of the speech
that the FDA is attempting to regulate
is noncommercial speech because it is
not uttered for the purpose of 'propos-
ing a commercial transaction.' While
manufacturers may have an economic
motivation in disseminating scientific in-
formation regarding the usefulness of
their products....[T]he absence of anN
explicit or implicit proposition of a com-
mercial transaction takes speech out of
JAMA February 2 1994-Vol 2?' No =
the realm of commercial speech and thus
out of the realm of virtuall;: all FDA
regulation."
To regulate truthful commercial
speech, the government must be able to
show that (1) it seeks to achieve a sub-
stantial interest; (2) the regulation di-
rectly advances this interest; and (3) the
regulation is no more intrusive than nec-
essary to serve that interest. The peti-
tion argues that the FDA's conduct fails
this test.
However, the petition appears to have
omitted an essential word in describing
the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. Ac-
cording to Peter Barton Hutt, an attor-
ney in private practice in Washington,
DC, who is a lecturer at Harvard Law
School, Cambridge, Mass, and a former
general counsel for the FDA, the act
requires the FDA to regulate false or
misleading promotional speech. When a
company selects and disseminates only
scientific information that portrays its
drug or medical device as superior, that
speech is misleading and the FDA has a
federal mandate to regulate that speech,
he says.
According to Hutt, the Supreme Court
has ruled that false or misleading pro-
motional speech is not protected by the
Constitution. "While the FDA has the
authority and the mandate of Congress
to prevent drug companies from dissemi-
nating misleading or false information,
it must do it in the least objectionable,
least intrusive manner, not only to pro-
tect free speech but to encourage it," he
says.
"The heart of the matter is finding a
way to prevent manufacturers from
making false or misleading claims about
drugs and medical devices while encour-
aging free speech, disseminating impor-
tant new medical information, and en-
couraging continuing medical education,
which are all very important to the prac-
tice of good medicine," Hutt says.
Comfortable With FDA Guidelines
Tha latest delay in issuing the final
FDA policy statement on industry-sup-
ported scientific and educational activi-
ties came as an unwelcome surprise to
Martin Shickman, MD, clinical profes-
sor of medicine and assistant dean for
postgraduate and community education,
UCLA School of Medicine, Los Ange-
les. Calif. Shickman, a respected leader
in the CME community, says, "As far as
we're concerned, this was a settled is-
sue. The education community is very
comfortable with the FDA draft policy
guidelines and has been operating un-
der them for quite a while.
"Although the publication of the final
regulations has been delayed several
times, the education community has ac-
cepted the [FDA's draft guidelines] as
the standard for determining how to ac-
cept industry money for the production
of accredited CME programs. These
guidelines have helped the education
community to strengthen the credibil-
ity and integrity of its accredited CME
programs."
Indeed, Shickman says, the medical
education community and the FDA have
moved on to the next step. "We're now
trying to develop appropriate guidelines
for industry involvement in the prepa-
ration and dissemination of "durable"
scientific and educational materials,
which include textbooks, monographs,
and journal supplements as well as non-
printed media, such as videos, audio pro-
grams, computer programs, compact
discs, and other technologies.
"The FDA has been very flexible. It
was willing to listen to medical educa-
tors and to modify its first draft of regu-
lations so that we think we now have a
very reasonable document. I'm not wor-
ried about being able to sit down with
the FDA to develop reasonable rules
and guidelines on durable industry-sup-
ported educational materials."
Shickman says he has a problem with
the laissez-faire policy advocated by the
Washington Legal Foundation. "I think
we have to have guidelines," he says. If
material is truly educational, then the
rules regarding off-label speech should
not apply, but if the material is promo-
tional, it should stick to the FDA's la-
beling requirements.
"Very often, the medical community
is way ahead of the FDA regarding the
use of drugs and devices," he says.
"Drugs may be used beyond what's
printed on the label and that's basically
the substance of CME. If you prevent
the discussion of off-label use of medi-
cations, there would be little point in
holding CME programs. One could just
read the package insert and one would
know all one needs to know about the
drug.
"However, there's a difference be-
tween commercial speech and educa-
tional speech, and this boundary is worth
protecting," Shickman says. "The power
of advertising to mislead is enormous. I
would be very reluctant to allow unre-
stricted promotion of off-label uses."
The dissemination of information on
unapproved uses of pharmaceuticals and
medical devices must take place in cred-
ible forums-properly peer reviewed by
specialty organizations-in centers of
learning, or in respected journals, if com-
panies are to be prevented from dis-
guising advertisements as educational
materials, Shickman says.
-by Andrew A. Skolnict;
Meeicai News & Persoectves 333
