Pubdate: Sat, 13 Oct 2001 Source: New Scientist (UK) Page: 50-51 Copyright: New Scientist, RBI Limited 2001 Contact: http://www.newscientist.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/294 Author: Daniel S. Greenberg Note: Greenberg is based in Washington DC and is author of Science, Money, and Politics: Political triumph and ethical erosion (University of Chicago Press, 2001) AT ANY COST Money Is A Major Motivation In Science Today. Where Does That Leave Truth, Openness And Public Responsibility*? Daniel S. Greenberg Fears The Worst "Who holds the patent on this vaccine?" Jonas Salk was asked in 1955 amid worldwide acclaim for his creation of the first polio vaccine. "Well, the people, I would say," Salk replied, adding: "There is no patent. Could you patent the Sun?" That quaint episode in entrepreneurial innocence dates back to a bygone era in science, when the thrill of discovery, collegial recognition and service to mankind were the principal motivations in university based research. In the contemporary culture of science, that trio survives. But to a disturbing extent it has been joined and overshadowed by a new force: money, and the opportunity for professors and their institutions to make gobs of it by selling their skills and knowledge to industry. Along the way, some of the great values of science have been trampled, including truthfulness, openness with colleagues, the public wellbeing, and responsibility to students. In the plaintive words of Kary Mullis, the Nobel-prizewinning inventor of the polymerase chain reaction: "Probably the most important scientific development of the 20th century is that economics replaced curiosity as the driving force behind research." That development is cheered, rather than mourned, by the reigning scientist-businessmen and politicians, impatient for practical returns from spending on research. Science for the sake of science, they agree, is a costly anachronism. Its successor is science for profit. Industrialised nations, without exception, have adopted schemes to breach the ivory towers, encourage entrepreneurial spirits, and link the corporate sector to the once sheltered monastics of university science. Industry now finances about 9 per cent of the R&D in American universities, and academe's annual proceeds from royalties and other payments from industry total about $1 billion. In the fast-moving biomedical sciences, the productive professor without stock options is a rarity - often pitied for missing out on the booty. Is there anything to lament in this fruitful partnership of brains and commerce? Is corporate money really corrupting science, as is often contended these days? For grounds for concern we need only tune into the anguished cries emanating from many inhabitants of academe as they have become acquainted with a simple fact of capitalist enterprise: companies exist to make money, and virtually everything they do is focused on that goal - including deals with universities. "We're adopting a business model instead of an education model," a chemist at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University complained in a 1997 study conducted by the Research Corporation, a foundation that promotes technology transfer from academe to industry. "The rationale is collaborations [with industry] are good because they bring in money . . . There can be benefits, but you're not training students any more; you're bringing them in to work to satisfy a contract. The emphasis shifts from what's best for the student to the bottom line." This shift in emphasis has pervaded broad sectors of academic research. For example, finding qualified scientists without industrial ties to evaluate pharmaceutical drugs is increasingly difficult, said Marcia Angell last year when editor-in-chief of The New England Journal or Medicine (NEJM) She noted that sometimes "we've had to give up because the first five or six people on the list all had conflicts". A conflict of interest looks particularly bad when something goes wrong. In 1999, an 18-year-old volunteer died in a clinical trial at the University of Pennsylvania's Institute for Human Gene Therapy following infusion with an experimental gene solution. Afterwards, it was revealed that he had not been informed of adverse reactions in patients given similar treatments or of the related deaths of several experimental monkeys. It was later disclosed that the institute's director held a financial interest in the experimental treatment. There is no suggestion the two are linked, but a conflict can cloud people's perceptions. Financial dealings between researchers and industry "have got entirely out of control" said Greg Koski on moving from Harvard Medical School to the directorship of the federal Office for Human Research Protections (OHRP) last year. He described the system for protecting research volunteers as "dysfunctional". In recent years, several medical school professors in the US have been heavily fined by the Securities and Exchange Commission for insider profiting on drugs they've tested for pharmaceutical firms. The risk to patients is clear. Researchers receiving financial support from drugs companies tend to report favourably on their products in supposedly objective scientific papers, according to studies published in NEJM and The Journal of the American Medical Association. Some efforts at reform have evoked resistance from leading scientific organisations that should know better. For example, draft guidelines from the OHRP for exposing and controlling conflicts of interest were rejected as "premature" by the Association of American Medical Colleges, which insists that universities be permitted to develop their own systems of safeguards. But the good news is that recent assaults on scientific integrity have stimulated an immune reaction in many influential quarters. Last month, more than a dozen of the world's leading medical journals announced that authors would henceforth be required to provide assurances that their findings were not distorted to suit their sponsors. A joint editorial explained: "The use of clinical trials primarily for marketing, in our view, makes a mockery of clinical investigation and is a misuse of a powerful tool." Last year, Harvard Medical School dropped plans to loosen its conflict-of-interest regulations. It retained its limit of 20 per cent on the proportion of time researchers can spend on outside activities, and its limit of $20,000 on the amount of stock they can hold in companies that finance research in their laboratories. Following several cases in the US in which the government has shut down university research programmes that were in violation of patient-protection rules, many universities have begun to tighten surveillance of industry-sponsored clinical trials. Academe's zest for industrial money ironically comes at a time when a beneficent Congress has almost doubled the budget of the National Institutes of Health - to a colossal $23 billion-in a mere five years. There's plenty of money out there, but also never enough, which guarantees that academe and industry will continue their tango. The results, in fact, can be greatly beneficial for society, but the side effects can also be injurious. The antidotes are plain to see: insistence on full disclosure of financial dealings, transparency in all relations with sponsors, and tender care of science's great traditions of collegial civility. If the professional societies of science encourage public disclosure and condemn sordid behaviour in pursuit of financial gain and glory, it would have a civilising effect on the whole scientific community. As for Jonas Salk's question about patenting the Sun: sounds improbable, but that's what lawyers are for. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth