Tuesday, June 03, 2014

WLF to FDA Regarding Distribution of Off-Label Reprints: See You in Court!

In February 2014, FDA released a new draft guidance document entitled "Distributing Scientific and Medical Publications on Unapproved New Uses - Recommended Practices."

FDA's revised guidance is aimed at addressing some of industry's and the public's concerns regarding the previous guidelines by making clear that the pharmaceutical and medical device industries can distribute medical and scientific reprints -- including reprints of studies for new and unapproved uses of drugs -- to medical professionals, but only under certain conditions.

In public comments submitted to FDA, the Washington Legal Foundation (WLF) -- a non-profit legal organization that promotes pro-business and free-market positions and is widely perceived as conservative -- argues that the guidance document is in "direct violation of a 1998 permanent injunction (WLF v. Friedman) it obtained against the agency to prevent it from trampling on industry's purported First Amendment rights" (see here). WLF said it "intends to enforce its injunction and will seek contempt of court citations against FDA officials who violate its terms."

WLF cites three FDA proposals with which it has specific issues.

(1) FDA proposes that scientific and medical journal articles should be from a peer-reviewed journal, be distributed in unabridged form (i.e. reprint), contain information from an "adequate and well-controlled clinical investigation" and be "scientifically sound." WLF wants the FDA to eliminate any reference to "adequate and well-controlled clinical investigation," a reference that, according to the WLF, "likely will be interpreted as imposing severe limitations on the types of journal articles that may be disseminated."

(2) FDA proposes that FDA-approved labeling should be disseminated along with the literature, as well as a comprehensive bibliography of information from other publications (including contradictory literature) and separate from any promotional literature. WLF wants the FDA to narrow the overly burdensome "disclaimer" requirements, such as that the article be accompanied by a comprehensive bibliography and articles/texts expressing contrary or different conclusions.

(3) The WLF also wants the FDA to "scale back on the limitations" imposed on disseminating medical texts, particularly the distribution of individual chapters from a medical text. "In the absence of such revisions," says WLF, "it will be virtually impossible for manufacturers to distribute reprints in a manner that complies with the Draft Guidance."

Pharma Marketing News and Pharma Marketing Blog are surveying readers for their opinions on these and other issues related to the distribution of off-label reprints to physicians by the pharmaceutical industry.

Survey respondents were asked their level of agreement or disagreement with 5 statements. Here's a chart of some results from the survey so far:

Click on chart for an enlarged view. See below for questions.
Here are the statements, presented in random order:
  1. Doctors have many other sources of information about off-label use of drugs -- the Internet and their own journal subscriptions, for example -- and do not require that pharmaceutical companies provide this information to them.
  2. Requiring a "comprehensive bibliography" to accompany reprints is "overly burdensome" and should be eliminated from the guidance.
  3. Under NO circumstances should drug companies be permitted to hand out off-label information -- including peer-reviewed journal articles -- to physicians and other health care professionals.
  4. FDA should "scale back on the limitations" imposed on disseminating medical texts, particularly the distribution of individual chapters from a medical text.
  5. Limiting reprints to those that contain information from an "adequate and well-controlled clinical investigation" will place "severe limitations on the types of journal articles that may be disseminated."
I'm not going to reveal which statements correspond to the letters in the chart above. Can you guess? Better yet: What's YOUR opinion? Take 2 minutes to respond to the survey here. Afterward, you will be able to see the results yourself.

2 comments:

  1. Is off-label marketing by drug companies allowed now? I know it used to be illegal but I wasn't sure if the laws had changed. I believe there was a case called "Carona" that involved marketing Xyrem off-label that was the subject of the drug companies trying to get off-label marketing allowed. Thank you for all your great posts Mr. Mack. I really enjoy reading them. Sincerely, John

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  2. I don't think it was ever technically illegal. Back in the day it was possible to deliver reprints to physicians BUT only if the physicians specifically made a request without prompting (ha!) and only by HCP peers working within the pharma company (not sales reps). Then, the FDA allowed sales reps to distribute these reprints UNSOLICITED under certain circumstances -- see http://www.news.pharma-mkting.com/pmn81-article03.htm

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