BMJ, doi: 10.1136/bmjusa.02050002, (Published 23 August 2002)

Editorials

Brains, claims, and the pharmaceutical industry

Conflict of interest in perspective

Education and debate BMJ USA p 283

The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.

This article originally appeared in BMJ USA

In this issue the journalist Jeanne Lenzer draws attention to the uneasy alliance between industry, science, and policy (BMJ USA p 283). She explores the relationship between Genentech, the manufacturer of alteplase (tPA), and the decision of the American Heart Association (AHA) to give that drug a class I recommendation as thrombolytic therapy for stroke. She accuses the AHA and Genentech of overstating the trial evidence for tPA, creating the "stroke attack" ad campaign to promote the drug, denying the existence of a guideline panel member because he disagreed with its recommendation, barring access to trial data, and delaying release of information from another trial.

Whether these assertions are true is not the focus of this editorial. Saver and colleagues (BMJ USA p 291) suggest that her characterization of the evidence may not be entirely accurate. Since the publication of the National Institutes of Neurologic . . . [Full text of this article]


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