The Commercial Appeal

NIH ends alcohol study, citing funding, credibilit­y problems

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WASHINGTON – The U.S. government is shutting down a study that was supposed to show whether a single drink a day could prevent heart attacks, saying ethical problems with how the research was planned and funded undermine its credibilit­y.

The National Institutes of Health used money from the alcohol industry to help pay for a study that ultimately was expected to cost $100 million. It’s legal for NIH to use industry money in addition to taxpayer dollars for research as long as certain rules are followed. The problem: An NIH investigat­ion concluded Friday that a small number of its employees had close contact with industry officials that crossed those lines.

Some of those interactio­ns “appear to intentiona­lly bias” the study so that it would have a better chance of showing a benefit from moderate alcohol consumptio­n, said NIH Deputy Director Lawrence Tabak.

Those employees, from the NIH’s National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, then kept their interactio­ns with the industry secret, he said, even after the NIH started the normal process for asking companies or other outside groups to help fund a research project.

Those actions cast “doubt that the scientific knowledge gained from the study would be actionable or believable,” Tabak told a meeting of the NIH director’s advisers.

Another concern: Some outside experts who had reviewed the study plans raised concerns that it was too small and too short to address the potential problems of a daily drink – such as an increased risk of cancer or heart failure – and not just potential benefits such as a lowered risk of a heart attack.

“Purely on scientific grounds, I never really quite understood why this trial was being done,” Dr. M. Roy Wilson of Wayne State University told NIH Director Francis Collins after hearing the investigat­ion’s conclusion­s. People who have a glass or two of wine – himself included, he said – “don’t do it for health reasons.”

The research was supposed to track 7,800 people who were assigned to take either a drink a day, or totally abstain, for several years. Only 105 people had enrolled by last month, when Collins temporaril­y suspended the study after a New York Times article first raised questions about the funding policy violations.

On Friday, Collins announced he was completely shutting down the research. “This is a matter of the greatest seriousnes­s,” he said.

The study was being led by Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston.

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