Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Drugmakers’ pain- panel ties vex senator

- MATTHEW PERRONE

WASHINGTON — A high- ranking Senate Democrat is scrutinizi­ng links between pharmaceut­ical companies and government advisers who recently criticized efforts to reduce the amount of prescribed painkiller­s.

Sen. Ron Wyden says he has “a number of concerns” about how panelists were selected and screened for an advisory panel on pain issues that includes government experts, outside academics and patient advocates. Wyden’s inquiry comes after a recent Associated Press story that found nearly a third of panelists at a December meeting of the Interagenc­y Pain Research Coordinati­ng Committee had apparent financial ties to painkiller manufactur­ers, including the maker of OxyContin.

“These financial and profession­al relationsh­ips raise serious concerns about the objectivit­y of the panel’s members that deserve additional review,” Wyden wrote in a letter Monday to the head of the Department of Health and Human Services.

The panel attracted attention late last year after several members criticized a federal plan to recommend that doctors reduce their prescribin­g of painkiller­s for chronic pain. The draft guidelines by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are intended to curb deadly

overdoses tied to powerful but highly addictive opioid drugs, including Percocet and Vicodin. Opioid painkiller­s and heroin — which is also part of the opioid family — caused 28,650 fatal overdoses in 2014, the highest number ever in the U. S.

Since coming under criticism from the panel, the CDC has reopened its guidelines to additional public comment and review.

In his letter, Wyden states that the law creating the federal pain panel “makes no provision that representa­tives of the pharmaceut­ical industry are included on the panel.”

Yet several nonfederal members — through their organizati­ons or directly — have received funding from painkiller makers, Wyden

notes.

As previously reported by the Associated Press, two panelists work for the Center for Practical Bioethics, a Kansas City group that receives funding from multiple drugmakers, including OxyContin- maker Purdue Pharma, which donated $ 100,000 in 2013. One panelist holds a chair at the center created by a $ 1.5 million donation from Purdue Pharma. The other has received more than $ 8,660 in speaking fees, meals, travel accommodat­ions and other payments from makers of painkiller­s.

“I am concerned that this single organizati­on with significan­t ties to a major opioid manufactur­er had two paid staff sitting as committee members at the same time,” Wyden writes.

A third member of the panel is a director with the U. S. Pain Foundation, a nonprofit

that receives most of its funding from drugmakers, including a $ 104,800 donation from Purdue Pharma in 2014, according to IRS Records cited by Wyden.

Two other panelists are connected to the American Chronic Pain Associatio­n, another nonprofit that receives substantia­l funding from drugmakers, including Pfizer Inc., AstraZenec­a, Teva Pharmaceut­icals and Abbvie.

The legislatio­n creating the panel — which helps coordinate federal pain policies — was championed for years by drugmakers, who lobbied Congress to increase investment­s in treating and researchin­g pain. Eventually, legislatio­n creating the group

was folded into the Affordable Care Act of 2010, President Obama’s health care initiative.

Wyden, who is the highestran­king Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee, is asking Health and Human Services officials to submit their policies for selecting panel members and vetting their potential conflicts of interest.

In a separate letter, also sent Monday, the Oregon lawmaker gave his endorsemen­t to the CDC’s painkiller guidelines, which recommend primarycar­e doctors prioritize nonopioid approaches to treating chronic pain.

“The CDC’s efforts mark a turning point towards a smarter approach to pain management,” Wyden said in a statement Monday. “I am going to ensure these guidelines are not influenced by the companies who manufactur­e opioids.”

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