THE FRONT
Corrupting Science CAPITULATING TO INTENSE pressure from universities
and the biomedical industry, Secretary of Health and Human Services Louis
Sullivan recently quashed conflict of interest guidelines proposed by the
National Institutes of Health (NIH). The proposed guidelines recommended
that recipients of funding from NIH or the Alcohol, Drug Abuse, and Mental
Health Administration disclose their financial holdings and divest their
stock holdings in companies whose products they test. In scrapping the
guidelines, Sullivan said it is "important that we not impose on our scientific
community regulatory burdens which may be unnecessary or counterproductive.
Likewise, it is important that we not unnecessarily jeopardize the international
leadership position we have built up through years of cooperative government
and private investment." NIH initially proposed the guidelines in response
to Congressional pressure and several well-publicized incidents involving
conflicts of interest. Most of the Congressional pressure came from Representative
Ted Weiss, D-N.Y., and his Human Resources and Intergovernmental Relations
Subcommittee. The Subcommittee scrutinized NlH's conflict of interest policy
at hearings held in 1988 and 1989 to examine scientific fraud and university-industry
relations. Weiss's hearings focused attention on several previously reported
conflicts of interest. At a Harvard-affiliated hospital, for example, a
researcher, Scheffer Tseng, distorted the results of experiments he conducted
for a company, Spectra Pharmaceutical Services, Inc., established to market
an eye ointment he had developed. Declaring the ointment a success by virtue
of his fraudulent data, Tseng was able to jack up the price of Spectra
stock. He then sold his Spectra holdings at a reported profit of $1 million.
The faculty overseer who should have enforced Harvard's conflict of interest
guidelines failed to do so, apparently because he owned stock in Spectra
and profited from Tseng's deceit. Downplaying the significance and extent
of conflicts, universities and industry lobbied hard against the NIH guidelines,
showering NIH with over 700 letters. Almost all of the nation's preeminent
research universities, including Yale, Stanford, the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology, several campuses of the University of California and Harvard
submitted formal comments opposing the guidelines. Prestigious professional
organizations and hospitals voiced their objections, as did dozens of small
biotechnology companies and several large pharmaceutical corporations,
such as Pfizer and Hoffman-LaRoche. Massachusetts Governor Michael Dukakis,
on behalf of the Massachusetts Biotechnology Center of Excellence, also
criticized the guidelines. The university-based opponents expressed extreme
hostility to the guidelines. Kenneth A. Smith, MIT vice president for research
called them "flawed beyond redemption." William C. Kelly, vice president
for research at the University of Michigan, wrote that "they apprehend
a simple, static, unidimensional, and curiously old-fashioned vision of
the world of a faculty member." He called them "fatally flawed." The dean
of the engineering school at the University of Texas at Dallas accused
NIH of "promulgating nonsense." The associate vice chancellor for academic
affairs at the University of San Francisco, Karl J. Hittelman, called the
guidelines "alarming." Industry opponents voiced equally strong criticisms.
An executive at the Reliable Chemical Co. suggested the guidelines would
"just hand the entire biotechnology field to the Japanese." The CEO of
Seragen wrote that the guidelines would cause "the U.S. biomedical industry
to languish in a second-rate position." Opponents also claimed that the
guidelines would harm the "technology transfer" process. Having a financial
interest in the commercialization of their research provides professors
the incentive they need to participate in moving ideas from the laboratory
to the marketplace, they argued. Expressing an extreme version of this
position, Frederick Fluegel of Matrix Partners wrote, "Financial incentives
are what make a capitalist society work. One need only to look at innovation
in the communist or socialist countries to understand this issue." That
the guidelines evoked vituperative objections from universities and industry
is ironic. Because they were proposed as "guidelines" rather than as "regulations,"
compliance with them would have been voluntary. Thus, the stock holdings
prohibited by the guidelines were actually "voluntarily prohibited." While
the guidelines' phrasing suggested they would be broadly interpreted, NIH,
in fact, planned on applying them narrowly, according to Janet Newburgh,
NIH Institution Liaison Officer. For example, the guidelines said that
no recipient of NIH funding "shall be allowed to have personal equity holdings
in any company that would be affected by the outcome of the research" sponsored
by NIH. But Newburgh stated that this provision would only (voluntarily)
prohibit researchers from holding stocks in companies whose products they
were testing. In most cases, scientists would have been able to hold stock
in companies sponsoring their research. Other financial arrangements, such
as consultancies, would have been permitted in all instances. Leonard Minsky,
Executive Director of the National Coalition for Universities in the Public
Interest and a supporter of strict conflict of interest standards, thinks
the guidelines were "never sincerely promoted by NIH." NIH was "under a
lot of pressure from Congress and [specifically] Ted Weiss," so it promulgated
the guidelines in order to "generate a lot of resistance among" universities
and industry. Having received an overwhelmingly negative response from
a mobilized university and business community, Minsky believes, NIH was
able to use the response as a justification for scrapping the guidelines.
Other evidence supports Minsky's theory. Kenneth Sloan, associate professor
at the University of Florida, reported to NIH that the University's vice
president for sponsored research called the guidelines ridiculous and said
they had been written that way on purpose to insure that they would not
be accepted. An aide to Representative Weiss says the theory "is not inconsistent
with the way things have been handled" by NIH. A meeting held by NIH in
June 1989 to discuss conflicts of interest, the aide notes, featured administrators
rather than researchers and seemed designed to attract criticism. NIH denies
that it proposed the guidelines in order to generate criticism. Don Ralbovsky,
a spokesman for NIH, says the guidelines were put forward as a "good faith
effort." Similarly, Dr. Katherine Bick, Deputy Director for Extramural
Research at NIH, says NIH is "not so Machiavellian" that it would propose
guidelines it wanted to see abandoned. The future of NlH's conflict of
interest policy is murky, but some change is probably inevitable. NIH and
Sullivan's office say they remain committed to implementing new standards
in the form of mandatory regulations. If NIH does not move quickly to implement
stronger regulations, however, Congress will probably enact legislation
on the issue. "That seems where [we are] headed now," Weiss's assistant
says, adding that legislation "will make the scientific community much
more unhappy than they were with the guidelines." -Robert Weissman ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[] MULTINATIONAL MONITOR December 1989 VOLUME 11, NUMBER 12, DECEMBER 1989
The Politics of Penta ENVIRONMENTAL Protection Agency (EPA) officials are
once again under attack. This time they are accused of bowing to pressure
from wood-treatment industry lobbyists and softening once- stringent regulatory
proposals concerning the manufacture of a dioxin-contaminated pesticide
and the disposal of its hazardous wastes. The charges are made in "The
Politics of Penta," a report recently released by the environmental group
Greenpeace. The report traces the process by which the EPA's regulatory
proposals for Pentachlorophenol (Penta), a compound used extensively in
the wood treatment industry, were eventually watered down in response to
industry and Reagan administration pressure. Penta's effectiveness as a
pesticide made it a great commercial success. By the late 1960s, however,
it was linked to skin diseases, birth defects and the death of infants
in a hospital using Penta-laced laundry detergent. In 1978, the EPA issued
a notice that Penta registration was under review and could be terminated.
While this notice signalled an apparent EPA willingness to rid the environment
of the dangerous toxin, Penta registration posed a regulatory dilemma.
Stringent regulations based on the policy that there is no safe level of
dioxin could affect other government interests, such as dioxin-producing
municipal garbage incineration projects and litigation over dioxin-contaminated
Agent Orange. The EPA's regulatory dilemma was further magnified by environmental
statutes. Under the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act
(FIFRA), which governs the manufacture and use of Penta, environmentally
harmful products may be registered as long as the product's benefits outweigh
its risks. Armed with the knowledge that the EPA must weigh the benefits
against the risks and motivated by the fear that strict regulations would
economically devastate the industry, the wood treatment lobby initiated
a campaign to soften any proposed regulations. According to the report,
during the Reagan years EPA officials were eager to cooperate with the
industry. Starting in 1981, EPA officials routinely met in secret with
industry representatives to negotiate Penta regulations. In 1986, the EPA
announced that production of Penta could continue with limited agency oversight
of labelling and other consumer awareness programs. The EPA imposed ceilings
on certain dioxins in Penta, but Greenpeace says that the ceilings are
"weakened" and suggests that the EPA has not sufficiently monitored dioxin
levels in Penta. The weakened limits signalled a victory for industry,
but the uses of Penta, not just its production, were still open to regulation.
The process of treating wood with Penta, not just the process of creating
the chemical, generates contaminants that accumulate in and around factory
sites. The EPA had to examine the management of Penta's hazardous waste,
not under FIFRA, but rather under the Resource Conservation and Recovery
Act (RCRA). The EPA considered two possible listings for the wastes under
RCRA. The first option was to list Penta wastes as "acutely hazardous;"
this would impose the strictest standards for waste management. The second
option, to list Penta wastes as "toxic," would impose far less stringent
and less costly requirements. The EPA also had to determine if these RCRA
listings would apply to wood treatment wastes, or solely to wastes from
the manufacture of Penta. Armed with evidence that wood treatment waste
contains contaminants such as 2,3,7,8-TCDD (considered the most toxic dioxin)
and hexadioxin (labelled carcinogenic in a 1981 National Cancer Institute
study), EPA chemist Dr. Cate Jenkins prepared a May 1986 memo calling for
wood treatment wastes to be designated "acutely hazardous." Peer review
of the memo, requested by an industry contractor who criticized Jenkins'
work, confirmed her findings. In February 1987, Jenkins prepared a draft
Federal Register notice that echoed the proposals in the May memo. Faced
with the likelihood of the most stringent waste management requirements,
industry lobbyists mobilized to quash Jenkins' recommendation. They argued
that an "acutely hazardous" listing would establish a "stigma," driving
waste contractors away and imposing prohibitive costs. Industry representatives
proposed, instead, that companies test their own wastes and determine,
without agency oversight, which wastes required which disposal methods.
The lobbyists, once again, stressed the economic damage that stringent
regulations would impose. However, under RCRA, unlike FIFRA, risk assessment
arguments are prohibited in determining listings. Despite this prohibition,
Jenkins' superiors invited industry input in the decision process. EPA
officials, according to the report, held secret meetings with industry
representatives. Jenkins told Multinational Monitor that such meetings
were unnecessary and, perhaps, illegal. Except for the purpose of gathering
data, Jenkins notes, "... there's no reason we would ever need to meet
with a wood preserver ... There's never any reason we would need to meet
the trade association. That's not a data source." Jenkins questioned her
superiors about the purpose of these meetings and suggested that the "stigmatization"
argument, with its economic impact underpinnings, might use an illegal
criteria for determining listings. Jenkins' superiors, notes the report,
consciously and repeatedly disregarded her concerns. In September 1987,
Jenkins was removed from the project. In December 1988, the EPA released
a new Federal Register listing proposal that assigned Penta wood treatment
wastes the "toxic" designation instead of the originally proposed "acutely
hazardous" listing. To justify the listing proposal, the EPA had to provide
a rationale other than the stigmatization argument (which had been declared
an illegal basis for RCRA decisions in a court case involving recycled
oil wastes). First, the EPA suggested that TCDD had not been found in wood
treatment wastes. When asked how the EPA could make such a claim in light
of substantiated data documenting TCDD contamination, Jenkins said that
EPA officials "... just lied, just covered it up, just falsified the data."
The EPA also suggested that hexadioxin was not, in fact, a carcinogen,
in spite of the National Cancer Institute study presenting strong evidence
to the contrary. To substantiate this claim, the EPA cited a study submitted
by Vulcan Chemical Company, the only remaining U.S. Penta producer. The
EPA listing proposal "breaks precedent with other listings for other contaminated
wastes," says Helen Perivier of Greenpeace in Seattle, because Penta wastes
are the sole dioxin- contaminated wastes proposed to be listed merely as
"toxic." Greenpeace argues that the manufacture and sale of Penta should
be banned and all wood treatment wastes from Penta should be designated
"acutely hazardous." When asked if she believed that the EPA might reverse
its present stand, Carol Van Strum, a co- author of the report, said she
thought it unlikely since, "It's my firm conviction that the EPA is a public
relations firm that runs interference for polluters." Responding to the
report, the American Wood Preservers Institute (AWPI), the primary industry
lobby, expressed disappointment and called allegations in the report "unjustified."
An AWPI representative stated, "...the Greenpeace approach does nothing
to protect human health and the environment at those sites or to expedite
cleanups." Jenkins, who has sued the EPA under the "whistle-blower" statute,
continues to battle for more stringent listings. She has filed a formal
review of the December 1988 proposal, and she told Multinational Monitor
that she intends "to stay at EPA until this is played out." The EPA must
submit a final listing by June 30, 1990. -Tom Ruwitch