let the discovery begin…

Posted on Thursday 2 February 2012


A whistleblower’s complaint from 2011 that was unsealed Jan. 20 in a federal district court alleged that Forest Pharmaceuticals paid the principal investigator of a federally funded antidepressant drug study to fix the results in favor of the company’s drug Celexa [United States ex rel. Pigott v. Forest Pharmaceuticals Inc., D. Md., No. 1:11-cv-00717, unsealed 1/20/12]. The whistleblower litigation was filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland by H. Edmund Pigott, a psychologist who resides in Clarksville, Md. The alleged False Claims Act violations occurred during the company’s management of the largest antidepressant drug trial ever conducted: the $35 million STAR*D [Sequenced Treatment to Relieve Depression] study, which was funded by the National Institute of Mental Health. The study enrolled 4,041 patients who were provided with 12 months of continuing antidepressant care.

In the article by J. Boren, A. Leventhal, and H.E. Pigott, “Just how effective are antidepressant medications? Results of a major new study,” Journal of Contemporary Psychotherapy, 39 (2), 93-100 [2009], Pigott had alleged there was bias in the STAR*D study in favor of Forest’s drug Celexa. In the litigation, he alleged that the bias was the result of kickbacks, bribes, and other improper financial inducements that were paid by Forest to Dr. John Rush, the principal investigator of the study, and to one or more of the project’s other investigators. The complaint alleged that this conflict of interest not only caused the selection of Celexa as the only antidepressant employed in the first part of the study, but also led to falsification and overstatement of the effectiveness of Celexa in the study’s published result. The end result of the kickbacks and bribes, Pigott claimed, was a significant increase in the sales of Celexa and its second generation version, Lexapro, to patients covered by federal and state health care programs in violation of the FCA, 31 U.S.C. §378, and comparable state statutes, which impose liability on persons and federal contractors who defraud government programs.

According to the complaint, the NIMH initially entered into a contract for the STAR*D study with the University of Texas in September 1999 with Rush as the P.I. Celexa is a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor or SSRI. SSRIs prevent the body’s reuptake or removal of a naturally-occurring neurotransmitter that it is believed to have a positive impact on mood. STAR*D was designed as a comparative effectiveness study of different treatment options for people with major depression and included 12 pre-specified research outcome measures and a detailed analytical plan for evaluation. According to the complaint, Celexa was selected for the study even though it was the least prescribed of all SSRIs. Pigott argued that the least-prescribed status was either because Celexa was less effective than other SSRIs or had a greater risk continuation syndrome or drug-to-drug reaction. Patients in the study were first given Celexa and, if they failed to get relief from Celexa, they received one of three other antidepressant treatments.

The complaint stated that even after the passage of four years since the publication of STAR*D’s major summary article and the publication of over 70 peer-reviewed articles on the STAR*D findings, none of the articles published by the STAR*D authors have reported the outcomes of any of the 12 pre-specified measures of the study, nor have they reported any findings in a manner consistent with the study’s analytical plan as presented in STAR*D’s research protocol. The authors’ articles also did not discuss the main purpose of the study, which was to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of the various antidepressant treatments, Pigott claimed.

The article for which Pigott was coauthor, the complaint stated, documented that, in contrast to the positive results in STAR*D’s published findings, only 108 of STAR*D’s 4,041 patients [2.7 percent] had an acute-care remission and neither relapsed nor dropped out during the 12 months of continuing care that followed. The article also documented how STAR*D changed its research outcome measures and analyses, which resulted in an inflation of STAR*D’s remission rates by 44.9 percent. The complaint reported that 10 of STAR*D’s authors, including Rush, have disclosed in journal articles that they had received money from Forest and that in the summer of 2008 Rush left the University of Texas, moved to Singapore, and was replaced as the STAR*D P.I.

The complaint stated, “The relator has concluded and therefore alleges that the only reasonable explanation for the false and biased reporting of the study results is that Dr. Rush received significant financial remuneration from Forest that Forest paid to him for the purpose of influencing his actions”…

Everything about STAR*D is screwy, as noted by Dr. Pigott and a sea of posts on this and other blogs. At issue, can they prove it was payola. Let the discovery begin…
Hat Tip to AEK… 
  1.  
    Allen
    February 2, 2012 | 4:35 PM
     

    YES!!!! Star-D was peopled with Pharma Shills. I am glad someone is stepping forward. Godspeed Mr Pigott!

  2.  
    Nancy Wilson
    February 2, 2012 | 9:02 PM
     

    Good work, Ed!

  3.  
    February 3, 2012 | 2:19 PM
     

    The payola was only one rotten aspect, the study design was crap, too.

  4.  
    Evelyn Pringle
    February 4, 2012 | 9:05 AM
     

    This lawsuit is great news. Seems like legal filings are the only thing that can bring out the truth in the field of psychiatry. That being true, I hope they keep coming.

  5.  
    aek
    February 4, 2012 | 10:41 AM
     

    Being the one trick pony that I am, I’m going to gently disagree with Evelyn and Allen (Allen Jones, is that you? If so, a big howdy do! and continued gratitude) about WB legal proceeding being the be all and end all.

    Today I read about what happened to Roger Boisjoly. You all know what he did, but I think that no one will know what happened to him afterwards. The quote by Dr. Donaldson near the conclusion rings so very true:

    We should “applaud heroes, and hope they are among us, but to base our hope of remedy in ordinary systems on the existence of extraordinary courage is insufficient.”

    I’m holding Ed in my thoughts, as I continue to do with Evelyn Pringle, Allen Jones and all of the WBs I’m aware of (most never get anywhere near a day in court or even get the problems addressed in any venue – they are forever unknown).

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.