EPA Sued over Pesticide
Approval 4-18-08
A coalition of environmental and farm worker groups
sued the Environmental Protection Agency after the agency approved the sale
of four organophosphate pesticides that the groups say pose unacceptable risks
to the environment and human health. The
lawsuit alleged that the agency violated the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide,
and Rodenticide Act and the Endangered Species Act when it decided in 2006 to
allow the continued use of the chemicals, which are sprayed on fruits and
vegetables in California. California has classified one of the pesticides as a
cancer-causing substance, another as an air pollutant, and a third has been
banned or severely restricted in 13
countries. The approval came despite a
letter from unions representing EPA scientists urging Administrator Stephen
Johnson to reject the applications. Our colleagues in the Pesticide Program feel
besieged by political pressure exerted by Agency officials closely aligned with
the pesticide industry, the letter stated. We are concerned that the agency has
lost sight of its regulatory responsibility in trying to reach consensus with
those that it regulates, and the result is that the integrity of the science
upon which Agency decisions are based has been compromised.
According to
Earthjustice the environmental law firm that represents the coalition, the
substances have severe impacts on birds, fish, honeybees, threatened, and
endangered species and have carcinogenic and neurotoxic effects on human health.
The class of organophosphate
pesticides is derived from nerve gas poisons developed during
World War II. Clinton-era efforts to ban the pesticides were reversed by the
Bush Administration. The EPA approved the four substances as part of a
cumulative risk
assessment of 20 organophosphate pesticides in 2006, in which the Agency
concluded that with the
adoption of risk mitigation measures, they posed no significant
cumulative risk. The EPA and
CropLife America,
the trade association representing manufacturers of organophosphate and other
pesticides, could not be reached for comment on the lawsuit.
FDA Warns GSK on Failure to Report
Data
GlaxoSmithKline received a
warning from the Food and Drug Administration last week for failing to file
regular reports about clinical trials on Avandia, a widely prescribed diabetes
drug. The FDA called Glaxos failure to provide reports a serious violation and
urged the drug company to take steps to prevent future violations. The reports,
which are required by law and used to catch potential safety issues, were
discovered by the FDA in Glaxos records. The FDA inspection found that between
2001 and 2007, the company did not inform the agency about the start of nine
clinical trials and failed to provide progress updates on another dozen studies.
Avandia was linked to increased
risk
of
heart
attack in a New England Journal
of Medicine study and now carries a black-box warning on its label. Once
the highest-selling diabetes drug in the world, Avandia�s sales have plummeted
since the FDA ordered a warning label on the drug in November of last year.
UNC Renames Public Health School after
CEO Gift
The University of North Carolina School of Public Health will soon be known as
the Dennis and Joan Gillings School of Global Public Health because of a $50
million donation to the school by Quintiles Transnational Corp. CEO, Dennis
Gillings.
Quintiles Transnational, a research contract and services provider for
pharmaceutical companies, has annual revenue of $2 billion. Gillings, who
announced the gift last year, was a professor in the UNC department of
biostatistics for 17 years before he founded Quintiles Transnational in 1982.
Currently, he
serves on the advisory council of the school of public health. Gillings has
previously given over $3 million to the university.
While UNC officials have praised the Gillings charitable gifts, some local
professors have voiced concern. Steve Wing, an associate professor of
epidemiology at the UNC School of Public Health, and Cat Warren,
an associate professor in department of English at North Carolina State
University,
wrote in the Raleigh News Observer
last month that the Gillings donation to the school could extend corporate
influence over the school of public health. The editorial also pointed out that
the school has recently developed relationships with executives of Nestle,
McDonalds, PepsiCo, and Kraft Foods. If universities are skewed more toward the
agenda of for-profit companies, they will be increasingly unable to promote
public welfare when it conflicts with industrys bottom line, the professors
wrote.
In the week following the professors editorial, Barbara K. Rimer, dean of the
UNC School of Public Health responded with her own
editorial in the News Observer. The
Gillingses gift was subjected to great scrutiny within the university to assure
that it conforms to university policies and principles, including academic
integrity and autonomy. Their $50 million pledge is a personal not a corporate
gift, Rimer wrote. The school of public healths director of communications,
Ramona Dubose, added, The university does indeed have regulations designed to
protect the integrity of our research, no matter what the source of funding. We
do this in a variety of ways through agreements that stipulate our freedom from
constraints in publishing results and disclosure forms that disclose potential
conflicts. The universitys
policy on research relationships between the school and private entities is
also available online.
Study Suggests Ending Cancer Trials
Early Could be Unsafe
A
study published in the Annals of Oncology suggests new cancer drugs'
effectiveness could be exaggerated when clinical trials are halted early. Trials
are discontinued early if the drug appears to be unsafe, provides no benefit, or
is so beneficial that denying access to the treatment would be unethical.
Giovanni Apolone, author of the study, told the
Guardian that pharmaceutical
companies could be ending successful trials prematurely in order to gain quicker
access to the market. Halting trials too early because of patient benefit could
lead to incomplete and imprecise information about the drug. Potential adverse
(or additional beneficial) impacts of the medications could also go undetected
if the trials are shortened. The authors found that 25 cancer trials were
stopped early between 1997 and 2007. For 75 percent of those trials, the data
gained from them was used to apply for
FDA or European Medicine Agency approval.
Paul Meuller, an associate professor of medicine at the Mayo Clinic, warned
that such data could be unreliable and lead to dangerous decisions by government
agencies. Decisions are being made on some fairly shaky evidence, Mueller told
the
Wall Street Journal Health Blog.
While Mueller noted that halting trials early and bringing drugs to the market
sooner could benefit the industry and patients'
health, he said, Trials should be carried out long enough in order
to obtain data about outcomes important to doctors and patients.
Odds and Ends
House Oversight and Government Reform Committee
Chairman Henry Waxman (D_CA) last week
issued a
subpoena to the EPA demanding unredacted copies of documents concerning the
agencies refusal to grant California a
Clean Air Act waiver. The documents
pertain to communications between the agency and the
White House prior to the agencys decision
to deny the waiver, which would have allowed California to proceed with policies
to curb greenhouse gases. . . . The Food and
Drug Administration held two days of
hearings last week on possible agency guidelines designed to regulate
embryonic stem-cell therapies. The FDA continues to face pressure to approve
clinical trials of stem-cell-derived drugs from biotech companies.
Cheers and Jeers
- Cheer to
Lauran Neergaard of the
Associated Press for noting that
Andrei Gudkov of the
Roswell Park Cancer Institute also
founded Cleveland Biolabs Inc., a
drug company currently working on a new medical treatment that prevents
radiation damage during cancer treatment and biodefense.
- Jeer to to
Barnaby J. Feder of the
New York Times for quoting
Mary F. Hazinski, spokesman of the
American Heart Association (AHA)
about the benefits of home defibrillators without disclosing that last year
the AHA
received money from Zoll Medical,
Medtronic, and
Philips, three of the largest
manufacturers of home defibrillators. Hazinski extolled the usefulness of
home defibrillators for some consumers despite the results of a
long-awaited, government-supported
clinical trial published this month in the
New England Journal of Medicine,
which suggested otherwise.
from
http://www.cspinet.org/integrity/press/200804141.html