Thursday, February 28, 2013

Drug study recruiting at U of M questioned

A University of Minnesota ethics professor is asking for an investigation into drug study recruiting at the school and raising questions about whether mentally ill patients have been rubber-stamped into research.

The professor, Carl Elliott, says he has obtained consent documents for two separate schizophrenic patients that appear to be exact copies — not just in the subjects’ apparent replies, but in the positions of the lettering on the pages.

Elliott said it is improbable that separate patients would provide identical responses to the questionnaire, which includes open-ended questions about the risks and requirements of clinical research. And that, he said, raises questions about whether the university was really examining patients to determine their ability to consent to research.

Elliott’s allegation revives concerns about patient recruiting tactics that surfaced after the May 2004 suicide of Dan Markingson, who was participating in a drug trial known as CAFE, which compared the effectiveness of antipsychotic drugs.

The university was dismissed from a lawsuit by Markingson’s family and cleared of blame in the suicide by an arm of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. But Elliott, a professor of bioethics, and others have maintained that the university’s recruitment of Markingson was coercive and a breach of research ethics.

“Judging from this admittedly circumstantial evidence,” Elliott wrote on his blog, “it appears as if someone in the Department of Psychiatry may have been using a generic, photocopied form with predetermined answers as documentation that mentally ill research subjects were competent to consent to research studies.”

One of the evaluation forms Elliott posted was from Markingson’s lawsuit case file. The other came from another family. Elliott said he has heard from more families since his blog post about identical letters in their medical files.

The Star Tribune contacted families who told Elliott they had duplicate letters in their possession, but they declined to comment due to pending investigations of their claims.

University spokesman Justin Paquette said there are logical reasons for multiple patients possessing identical evaluation forms, but he couldn’t elaborate on them because the university limits all comments on the Markingson case to General Counsel Mark Rotenberg. He was unavailable Tuesday.

Markingson died by suicide in May 2004, while he was participating in the CAFE study despite multiple protests by his mother to the university. She insisted that her son was unstable and needed to withdraw from the study and receive different mental health care and medication.

Since details about the Markingson case were publicized in 2008, Elliott has become a vocal critic of the way the university recruited Markingson into research and responded after his death. After posting his most recent blog, Elliott filed a complaint with the U of M’s research integrity officer, claiming that the duplicate letters show evidence of research misconduct.

He received a reply Tuesday indicating that the university won’t investigate because the alleged misconduct did not occur within the school’s seven-year statute of limitations for such complaints. Elliott said he plans to file a complaint with the FDA Office of Scientific Investigations as well.

Shortly after Markingson’s death, his consent to participate in research was reviewed by Dr. Stephen Olson, the psychiatrist in charge of Minnesota’s arm of the national CAFE study. In a May 17, 2004 letter to university oversight officials, Olson said that Markingson “answered the evaluation questions satisfactorily” and was “considered competent to sign the consent.”

At the time Markingson participated in the study, Olson was his primary doctor but also a legal adviser on whether Markingson should be committed, and was the lead researcher for the CAFE study.

As a result of the Markingson case, the Minnesota Legislature has since made it illegal for a psychiatrist to recruit his own patients into his own clinical trials.

Since Markingon’s suicide, the only person publicly sanctioned in the case was Jean Kenney, the former U of M social worker who worked under Olson and recruited patients into his clinical trials. While not disciplined, Kenney agreed last November with the Minnesota Board of Social Work to complete additional training due to recordkeeping errors she made in Markingson’s care. The board also accused her of making clinical judgments about Markingson’s response to medication that were beyond her training as a social worker and of failing to adequately respond to the concerns of Markingson’s family.

Jeremy Olson • 612-673-7744

Posted via email from Jack's posterous

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