Competing interests:
PT has received travel and research support from pharmaceutical firms for
over 30 years. This support has permitted research associates to work on
methodological projects of no commercial interest, has supported students
and fellows who otherwise wouldn't have been able to get an education,
and has provided partial support for the planning and organisation of scientific
meetings in which they had no say about subject matter, content, or speakers.
His randomised trials of cyclosporine published in the Lancet and
New
England Journal of Medicine were funded in part but never in whole
by pharmaceutical firms, who had no access to the emerging data, no control
over whether or when the studies stopped, and no veto power over any publications
or presentations.
PT is editor of the Cochrane Musculoskeletal Review Group, which has
received unrestricted grants for staff support in carrying out systematic
reviews, some of which failed to draw favourable conclusions about donor’s
drugs.
While PT was Chair of Medicine at the University of Ottawa a policy
was introduced to prohibit pharmaceutical firms from solo support of department
educational rounds or from any say in content. He also enforced a policy
of using generic names. PT has never received awards from pharmaceutical
firms. When serving on the US Government National Science Panel examining
the relationship between silicone breast implants and connective tissue
disorders, PT was certified by a US District Court judge to be free of
any industry influence.