| FDA Document Leaks Revisited |
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After seven months of inaction by FDA's Office of Internal Affairs (OIA), the FBI has taken over investigation of the most serious breach of security at FDA since the generic drug scandal. At the center of the case is last November's leak of proprietary product approval documents belonging to laser manufacturer Visx (Santa Clara, CA) to its competitor Summit Technology (Waltham, MA). Now, it will fall to the bureau to identify and locate the as-yet unknown FDA employee who leaked the documents.
This development, along with questions troubling to anyone who has entrusted secrets to FDA, was revealed at a July 31 hearing of the House Commerce oversight and investigations subcommittee, chaired by Joe Barton (RTX). "If we can't maintain the confidentiality of documents at the FDA, then we should abolish the FDA," Barton commented.
Both Summit and FDA respectfully declined to appear at the hearing, citing their sensitivity to the ongoing investigation. But the only two witnesses who did appearVisx CEO Mark Logan and former FDA device reviewer Mark Stern, who reviewed the Visx premarket approval (PMA) applicationprovided more than enough food for thought. Their testimony provoked both Barton and subcommittee minority leader Ron Klink (DPA) to vow that the subcommittee will track the scandal to its end, regardless of the outcome of the November elections. Issues that particularly concerned the congressmen included the following:
*Why would Summit CEO David Muller, who has said he received the leaked documents in an envelope at his home last November 24, throw away the envelope? Barton expressed disbelief that anyone receiving such documents would do so.
A subcommittee analysis of FDA records of OIA activities appears to show that the office stopped taking official actions against FDA staff at about the time the Summit case began. For the fiscal year 1995, the office reported 4 employee terminations, 5 resignations, 7 suspensions, 10 letters of reprimand, and 5 letters of admonishment. For the eight months to June 30 of this year, OIA reported only one letter of reprimand.
While not very conclusive, the subcommittee analysis nevertheless paints a picture of an agency that seemed to be struggling hard to sweep a major embarrassment under the rug as Congress was considering reform legislation.
The embarrassment in this case was a federal crime worth 12 months in prison, whether or not bribery was involvedthe deliberate leaking of a company's confidential documents to one of its direct competitors. There has been no suggestion that Summit Technology or any intermediary on its behalf made a "cash or kind" payment or offer of a payment or favor to anyone at FDA. But such evidence is not necessary to make the leak a felony, as FDA should have known at the outset.
Visx insists that the FDA leak greatly damaged it in the marketplace, especially with respect to a future competitive advantage it expected to have over Summit. But it is society that stands to lose the most, if this episode erodes public confidence in FDA's integrity.
This new incident is strongly reminiscent of the 1988 generic drug scandal in most respects other than evidence of any transfer of gratuities.
Apparently to forestall suspicions that the laser scandal reflects a dysfunctional agency unable to discipline itself, FDA associate commissioner for public affairs Jim O'Hara asserted after the July 31 hearing that the agency had conducted "a very intensive and thorough investigation, in coordination with other agencies" including the FBI. Because FDA statements might jeopardize the ongoing FBI investigation, he added, the agency had decided to remain silent even if it meant looking bad, confident that in the end a retrospective look would show that it had acted properly and diligently throughout the laser ordeal.
That seems a doubtful prospect. FDA has always presented a dense view of its decision-making processes, especially where its interactions with other agencies (in this case, the FBI) are involved. No public accounting of FDA's investigational decision making in the generic drug scandal has ever emerged. Neither has the agency publicly described its decisional roles in any of the major criminal investigations it has referred to the Justice Department in recent years.
Typically, after an investigation moves to another agency for further development, such as prosecution, FDA steps into the background and stays there. Judging from all the media reports that flowed from the generic drug scandal, for instance, one could conclude that FDA had virtually no role in any of the investigations. All of the public statements emanated either from Congress or the U.S. Attorney's Office in Baltimore. Yet the agency in fact assembled a special team of excellent investigators who were absorbed into the U.S. Attorney's office, and who did almost all of the case development against dozens of individuals in industry.
If a day of final reckoning in the laser scandal is reached, the behavior of the OIA will likely be as much a mystery as it is today. Questions that FDA won't be more willing to answer then than now will likely include the following:
Unless these issues are dealt with effectively and soon, there may well be more leaks. And then, as chairman Barton said, we might as well not have an FDA. In his perspective, leaks by FDA make the case for third-party product marketing reviews stronger and less controversial. At least a nongovernmental reviewing organization would have legal liability for any leaks by its employees.
James G. Dickinson is a veteran reporter on regulatory affairs in the medical device industry.