| Alexei
Koudinov correspondence with Donald Kennedy, Science Editor-in-Chief
---------------------------------------
Correspondence
Part 6 | Back2Text
--------------------------------------------------
At 12:30 AM 4/22/2003 +0300, Alexei
Koudinov wrote:
21 April 2003
Dear Dr.Kennedy,
I hope you are doing well and have
memorable holidays.
Following our earlier correspondence
I would like to report that I do my best to follow scientific issues in
discussing Alzheimer's research.
It is not always possible, though.
As you should be aware last Friday, April 18, 2003 Science published a
report on oligomers of amyloid beta protein and Alzheimer's disease. We
had important issues to add to the discussion and summarized it in already
submitted (via online submission system) letter to the editor, that I attach
for your convinience. In this letter we discuss science only. As the argument
is sound I hope Science will consider publishing it.
But I feel obliged to let you know
that this Science report misses the competing interest declaration by one
of the senior authors. I easily discovered it at Forbes magazine. Attached
are two .PDF files with Acrobat printouts of thess documents. You can also
navigate to it by clicking on the following link:
<http://www.forbes.com/finance/mktguideapps/personinfo/FromPersonIdPersonTearsheet.jhtml?passedPersonId=182960>
I hope that you will take an appropriate
action with regard to this competing interest matter.
Sincerely yours,
Alexei Koudinov, MD, PhD
---------------------------------------
Correspondence
Part 5 | Back2Text
--------------------------------------------------
At 02:37 AM 2/28/2003 +0200, Alexei
Koudinov wrote:
Subject: A story
Dear Dr.Kennedy,
I was very proud of Science last
week, Friday (Feb. 21, 2003) night and a greater part of Saturday (Feb.
22, 2003), as I discovered at Science online that five articles by D. Selkoe
(of total seven) are red stamped with the notice "This article has been
retracted".
I further looked for articles that
have words 'amyloid beta' anywhere in article text. My screening of some
of them retrieved several articles that had identical retraction flag.
The selectivity of retracted titles implied a clear picture.
I thought that you not only retracted
five articles by Selkoe published in 2001 and 2002, but also those articles
by others that Selkoe likely reviewed. I was not sure whether just a "note
of concern" would be sufficient ,or a full "retraction", but I trusted
in your wisdom and the robustness of your decision. Why only 2001 and 2002?
Because all stamped articles were after the sale by D.Selkoe and other
Elan directors their Elan shares in February 2001, a time when D.Selkoe
major conflict become apparent.
I did believe in the above. Moreover,
I further thought that following the Science example of high profile ethics
the other scientific bodies will fully disclose D. Selkoe conflict as compromising
their code of responsible conduct. I also thought that the space is reserved
in the last issue of Science 2003 for the coverage of the above as a breakdown
of the year.
On Saturday evening, though, retraction
flags were gone. My first feeling was that Science is testing the system
and that you just hide the retraction items scheduled to appear next Friday.
Next Friday (Feb. 28, 2003) come as Science's special issue on Aging did.
The miracle retractions remained hidden.
It was not a dream, though. Was it
a problem with the Science electronic publishing as noted by your editorial
colleague in response on my other inquiry? It is not important as the above
created a story that will share my feelings with Alzheimer's and neuroscience
research community and that will ask you further questions.
This community is hurt by D. Selkoe
conflict and associated bias. I welcome you to further learn about it in
my open letter to Public Citizen's Health Research Group (BMJ, Feb. 27,
2003, Ref.1).
Please note that I fully observe
the Society for Neuroscience Guidelines on Responsible Conduct Regarding
Scientific Communication.
Sincerely,
Alexei Koudinov
Reference:
(1) Open letter to Public Citizen's
Health Research Group on Alzheimer's disease research Alexei R. Koudinov
British Medical Journal, 27 Feb 2003 Available at: http://bmj.com/cgi/eletters/325/7357/226/a#29825
Current readership: 764
---------------------------------------
Correspondence
Part 4 | Back2Text
--------------------------------------------------
X-Mailer: Novell GroupWise Internet
Agent 5.5.5.1
Date: Fri, 07 Feb 2003 15:10:02
-0500
From: "Etta Kavanagh" <ekavanag@aaas.org>
To: <koudin@med.pfu.edu.ru>
Subject: please advise // Re: Thank
you for your response to Science
Dear Dr. Koudinov,
We will not be publishing your dEbate
submission, as we feel that it simply reiterates previous comments
you have made about Dr. Selkoe. Thank you for your interest in SCIENCE.
Best regards,
Etta Kavanagh
Associate Letters Editor
SCIENCE
ekavanag@aaas.org
Department e-mail: science_letters@aaas.org
---------------------------------------
Correspondence
Part 3 | Back2Text
--------------------------------------------------
At 01:29 PM 20/12/2002 +0200, Alexei
Koudinov wrote:
Donald Kennedy
Editor-in-Chief
Science
20 December 2002
Dear Dr.Kennedy,
I appreciate your note and your advise.
Your Science editorials on ethics
and prompt handling of the correction note for Selkoe conflict earlier
this year led me to realize that you oppose any form of ethics break, that
you support the openness of science, that you see the disclosure as the
only way to handle the break, and that there should be no double standards
no matter who is touched when the norms are impaired. I therefore thought
I must keep you informed of my correspondence (below), especially, because
D.Selkoe was publishing in Science at least three times this year, and
because one of these articles is now stamped as having a correction note
published.
Your letter referred me to Science
Instruction for Authors. The latest version of the Instructions (Vol.295,
4 Jan 2002, p.151) says that "also required for submission" is "a completed
conflict-of-interest statement" and that "Pdf available from online
Information for contributors". The indicated form further informs prospective
authors that "Science policy requires you to state whether you or any of
your co-authors have financial or other conflicts of interest that might
be construed as influencing the results or interpretation of your study"
(1).
There is no statement that it is
Science responsibility to provide authors with the form. Furthermore, my
letter to AAN (below) does not discuss how the correction note (2) appeared
in Science but just referees to the "correction note of a recent (27 Sept
2002) Science magazine issue".
On the other hand, based on the above,
and in light of the correction note of Sept. 27, 2002 (2) I do see that
Selkoe failed to provide full disclosure of his conflict in his another
article published in Science a month later, on October 25, 2002. This happened
despite of Science awareness of D.Selkoe conflict (2).
Oct. 25 issue of Science was distributed
free of charge at the Neuroscience meeting 2002 (2-7 November 2002, Orlando,
Florida) thus aiming the major neuroscience auditorium. Unfortunately,
the Selkoe statement (as a part of last reference of his paper Oct.25,
2002 article in Science ) that he is just "a consultant to Elan" is not
accurate and could mislead the audience because he is a director for Elan
and Elan shareholder (2,3).
My question is: who is responsible
for this inaccuracy and how Science will fix it ? This would be important
as one would find little doubt that what Science aims (to disclose the
"conflicts of interest that might be construed as influencing the results
or interpretation of your study", Ref.1, also see Ref.4) was not observed
in Selkoe viewpoint article in Oct. 25 Science issue, despite of Science
earlier publication of a correction note for an earlier article by Selkoe
(2).
There is another issue that I do
not agree with you. You write to me that my "extensive correspondence with
journals and societies, all of which appear to be a part of a campaign
to discredit Dr. Selkoe." I oppositely think that Selkoe himself is discrediting
AAN, Science and other scientific bodies. I believe that my correspondence
serves solely to protect the public trust in Alzheimer's disease and associated
neuroscience research. This is because "an event has occurred of which
it is difficult to speak and impossible to remain silent" (5).
I am confident that the story is
not closed and well reserves next year presentation as Science breakdown
of the year (6,7, also see Ref.4).
With best regards and best wishes
for Happy Holiday season !
Sincerely,
Alexei Koudinov
caring neuroscientist
References:
(1) http://www.sciencemag.org/feature/contribinfo/prep/conflict.pdf
(2) Corrections and clarifications.
Science Vol.297, Number 5590, Issue of 27 Sept 2002, p. 2209:
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/297/5590/2209b
(3) Cowley D. Elan Alzheimer's expert
in pre-slump share sale. Dublin, Ireland, 18 August, 2002, The Sunday Business
Post:
http://www.thepost.ie/story.jsp?story=WCContent%3Bid-53695
(4) Koudinov AR. Amyloid was never
clearly implicated in Alzheimer's disease, so look at Abeta from a different
angle. British Medical Journal (30 November 2002): http://bmj.com/cgi/eletters/316/7129/446#27397
(5) Wilmshurst P. The code of silence.
Lancet 349, 567-569 (1997) ; (5) Wilmshurst P. Institutional corruption
in medicine. BMJ 325, 1232-5 (23 November 2002): http://bmj.com/cgi/content/full/325/7374/1232
(6) Service RF. Breakdown of the
Year: Physics Fraud Science 298, 2303 (20 December 2002)
http://www.sciencemag.org/feature/data/btoy2002/index.shtml
(7) Kennedy D. Editorial: Breakthrough
of the year. Volume 298, Number 5602, Issue of 20 Dec 2002, p. 2283:
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/summary/298/5602/2283
----------------------------------------------------
At 09:02 AM 11/12/2002 -0500, Donald
Kennedy wrote:
Dear Dr. Koudinov:
You have been sending me copies of
your extensive correspondence with journals and societies, all of which
appear to be a part of a campaign to discredit Dr. Selkoe.
In this latest copy, I note the following
excerpt: "...and was publishing without acknowledging his corporate
financial interest. Some of the above become publically know, as you can
see in a correction note of a recent (27 Sept 2002) Science magazine issue.
" I find that misleading. The correction makes clear that Dr.
Selkoe did not fail to disclose. Because his manuscript did not come in
to our system electronically he did not receive the usual disclosure form.
When it was brought to his attention he executed the form promptly and
fully.
I would hope you will not continue
to represent this situation inaccurately. But I should also tell you that
I don't plan to keep track -- so please don't continue to send me all your
correspondence on this subject. I have other things to do with my
time. (And so, I would suggest, do you!)
Sincerely yours
Donald Kennedy
---------------------------------------
Correspondence
Part 2 | Back2Text
--------------------------------------------------
At 11:33 PM 28/10/2002 +0200, Alexei
Koudinov wrote:
Donald Kennedy
Editor-in-Chief
Science
28 October 2002
Dear Dr.Kennedy,
Thank you very much for your response.
My request followed what I believe
is the synthesis of my ten years expertise in the field of Alzheimer's
disease research, the field's need, the ethics of biomedical research,
and the responsible conduct regarding scientific communication (1).
Duplication by D. Selkoe opinion
article (Science, 27 Sept 2002, p. 2209, Ref.2) some items of recent Hardy
and Selkoe review article (Science, 19 July 2002, p. 353, Ref.3,4) on the
same subject of amyloid dogma (although under a different title) seems
unjustified and damaging the field of Alzheimer's disease.
I will be presenting this subject
in greater details at the 32nd Society for Neuroscience Annual meeting
(November 3-7, 2002) and will be happy to share the presentation with your
editorial colleagues should they attend our History of Neuroscience poster
session (see abstract below).
I certainly will continue to pursue
my purely scientific interest, and I am happy that there are other publishing
bodies that share my view (5). Please note that Ref.5 refers to a contribution
that was first submitted as Science dEbate letter to comment on your editorial
on ethics in science (23 Aug 2002, p. 1237, Ref.6).
Sincerely,
Alexei Koudinov, MD, PhD
neuroscientist and editor
http://anzwers.org/free/neurology
http://neurobiologyoflipids.org
References:
1 Society for Neuroscience. Responsible
conduct regarding scientific communication. Available at: http://www.sfn.org
2 http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/298/5594/789
3 http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/297/5580/353
4 http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/297/5590/2209b
5 Koudinov AR. Ethical conundrums:
an Alzheimer's case. British Medical Journal, published online 12 Sept.
2002, Available at:
http://bmj.com/cgi/eletters/325/7363/0/g#25404
6 http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/summary/297/5585/1237
-------------------------------------------------
At 11:13 AM 28/10/2002 -0800, Don
Kennedy wrote:
Dear Dr. Koudinov:
I believe that Dr. Selkoe's statement
is a sufficient announcement of what some might perceive as a conflict.
Thank you for bringing the matter
to our attention -- but your pursuit of this issue is beginning to look
like a campaign.
Sincerely yours
Donald Kennedy
--
Donald Kennedy
Bing Professor of Environmental
Science
Institute for International Studies
Center for Environmental Science
and Policy
Stanford University,
Stanford, CA 94305-6055
Ph: 650/725-2745
Fax: 650/725-1992
em: kennedyd@leland.stanford.edu
----------------------------------------------------
At 11:26 PM 27/10/2002 +0200, Alexei
Koudinov wrote:
Dear Dr.Kennedy,
I am writing with regard to last
Friday opinion article in Science magazine by Dennis Selkoe entitled "Alzheimer's
disease Is a Synaptic Failure" (Oct 25, 2002; available at: http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/298/5594/789).
This article (despite of the lack
of word AMYLOID in the title serves to push major Selkoe effort that is
tackling Alzheimer's disease by lowering amyloid. The article thus likely
is biased by Selkoe conflict of interest.
That is true that this article makes
an acknowledgement statement by Selkoe that he is a consultant for Elan.
However, this opinion article does not include the Conflict of Interest
declaration despite the fact that D. Selkoe accepted his conflict of interest
that was published as a correction note (27 Sept 2002, p. 2209; available
at: http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/297/5590/2209b
) with regard to his July 19 (p. 353) review article.
I am therefore feel obliged to bring
this fact to your attention and request publication in Science the correction
on October 25 opinion article by Selkoe.
I would like to provide the following
facts in support of my request:
-------
First,
-------
The Sunday Business Post article
entitled "Elan Alzheimer's expert in pre-slump share sale: (18 August 2002,
available at:
http://www.thepost.ie/story.jsp?story=WCContent;id-53695
) provides evidence that Selkoe is an Elan director (where he continuously
serves since 1996) and that he is an important shareholder.
"Selkoe also sold 20,000 shares for
just over $1 million on February 6, 2001. Elan directors' sales, in all,
came to over $43.5 million in February 2001. Selkoe had indicated that
he would sell 8,303 Elan shares, worth $364,623 on December 10, 2001 but
the company only has records of the smaller sale.
...The company also said that Selkoe
continues to own 163,000 shares...
...Selkoe joined the board of Elan
in 1996 following Elan's acquisition of Athena, where he had been a director
and co-founder. He is a professor of neurology and neuroscience at Harvard
Medical School and is also a co-director of the Centre for Neurologic Disease
at the Brigham and Women's Hospital..."
-----------
Second,
-----------
Today (Oct. 27, 2002) article in
the Post further quotes the chairman of Selkoes' Elan. This article (entitled
"Elan's Armen: 'We will survive') is available at: http://www.thepost.ie/story.jsp?story=WCContent;id-59174
.
and provides the proof that amyloid
(the matter of Selkoe opinion article in Science) is at the same time the
major commercial interest of Elan:
"...On the drugs pipeline: "Amidst
all the problems we have a very impressive pipeline -- real science." The
development risk was low because of the late stage of development of its
two key drugs: Antegen, which treats Crohn's disease and multiple sclerosis,
and its Alzheimers drug. Elan had the most advanced Alzheimers programme
in the world, he said.
Armen rejected suggestions that the
problems at the company were leading to an outflow of key scientists. "The
people in charge of the pipelines for Alzheimers, MS, and Crohn's disease
are not leaving, they have devoted their lives and careers to these products
and they are not walking away now. It is their life and their passion,"
he said. He remains optimistic about the outlook for the success of Elan's
Alzheimers drug even though it was withdrawn last January because of problems
of inflammation suffered by patients.
"The great majority of patients who
showed inflammation of the brain following vaccination have now recovered,"
he said.
"If plaque building in the brain
is responsible for Alzheimers -- as our scientists believe -- and our product
removes that plaque as it does, then cognitive improvement in patients
should be evidenced within a period of 12 months from initial vaccination.
So by the end of the year patients who were dosed in the November-January
period 2001/02 should be demonstrating cognitive improvement." "
(There are similar statement by the
chairman of Selkoe's Elan in today The Sunday Times entitled "Feature:
Elan chairman sees light at end of tunnel" that you can access at: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2095-459437,00.html
).
I hope that you will find the above
info compeling to justify your action.
As an additional note I would like
to invite you and your editorial colleagues to visit our History of Neuroscience
presentation at the upcoming Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting in
Orlando, Fla. For your convinience the abstracts are provided below.
Sincerely,
Alexei Koudinov, MD, PhD
--------------------
ABSTRACT 1
--------------------
ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE AND AMYLOID BETA
PROTEIN: DOGMA IS BAD FOR SCIENCE
(Sunday, Nov. 3-7 History of Neuroscience
Session #21.11 Poster board BB-11 )
There are no doubts about the perceived
importance of amyloid beta protein (Abeta) for the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's
and other related neurodegenerative disorders. The search of PubMed for
'amyloid beta and Alzheimer's disease' performed on 24 April 2002 retrieved
5835 articles. In addition to this open science measure there are 66 US
patents that have words 'amyloid and beta' in their titles [1]. The dogmatic
viewpoint is that Abeta is a bad neurotoxic molecule that has to be eliminated
from the brain tissue [2-6]. The inability of the toxic concept to provide
the disease cure become apparent this year when anti-amyloid vaccination
was withdrawn [7] and actually exacerbated the condition - a likely consequence
if one considers Abeta as an endogenous protector of neural function! That
amyloid might represent an epiphenomena or a compensatory response, while
justified scientifically, is blindly avoided [2-5]. However, there is now
compelling data that Abeta is NOT the mediator of disease but rather a
response (an antioxidant or a sensor of membrane lipids dynamics, for example)
to an underlying etiology. We believe that the unipolar discussion of Abeta
as toxic has served to severely hamper the advancement of neuroscience
by hiding the accumulating evidence that Abeta is a normal and functional
component of brain metabolism and synaptic function [7].
1 http://patft.uspto.gov/netahtml/search-adv.htm
2 Schenk et al Nature 400, 173 (1999)
3 Walsh et al Nature 416, 535 (2002)
4 DeMattos et al Science 295, 2264
(2002)
5 Dodart et al Nature Neurosci 5,
452 (2002)
6 http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/297/5590/2209b
7 http://bmj.com/cgi/eletters/324/7338/656#20681
Neuroscience2002 abstract search
is available at: http://sfn.scholarone.com/itin2002
--------------------
ABSTRACT 2
--------------------
AMYLOID DOGMA, SYNAPTIC FUNCTION,
AND ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE
(Poster abstract, The 3rd Neurobiology
of Aging Conference 2002, Oct. 31 - Nov.1, 2002)
The key claim of the amyloid hypothesis
is that amyloid beta (Abeta) represents a bad neurotoxic molecule that
has to be removed from the brain. Over the past decade this hypothesis
grew up into the major dogma of Alzheimer's research. The inability of
the toxic concept to advance the "curing" of transgenic mice into patients
become apparent earlier this year when anti-amyloid vaccination was halted
[1,2].
A beneficial role for Abeta is largely
not mentioned in the literature. However, the conceivable lack of the Abeta
interaction with lipoproteins (that potently inhibit toxicity of
the peptide [see refs in 2]) could exacerbate the lack of the in vivo physiological/therapeutic
relevance of the past studies of Abeta effect on synaptic plasticity [3].
Moreover, there is an accumulating evidence that Abeta and its precursor
are essential for brain function/chemistry. Particularly, Abeta is an antioxidant
and a molecular sensor of membrane lipid dynamics [1,2].
Abeta may also serve an essential
role in synapse/synaptic plasticity that underlie learning/memory. Thus,
it was shown that there is an acute facilitation of tetanus induced long-term
potentiation (LTP) and the development of slow onset potentiation in the
absence of tetanic stimulation by low dose of Abeta [4,5]. The latter report
proposed that Abeta peptides increase the probability of LTP under the
paradigm that induced little LTP in control brain slices [5]. The synaptic
function for Abeta is additionally supported by several studies by others,
particularly, by an increase of synaptic amyloid precursor protein with
learning capacity in rats, and by neuronal activity dependent secretion
of natural Abeta (see our SFN scientific/history posters for further details).
1. http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/eletters/296/5575/1991#469
2. http://bmj.com/cgi/eletters/324/7338/656#22216
3. Walsh et al. Nature 416, 535
(2002)
4. Wu et al. Europ J Pharm. 284,
R1 (1995).
5. Schulz PE. Soc Neurosci Abstr.
22, 2111 (1996)
Competing interests: none
The 3rd Neurobiology of Aging Conference
2002 web site is available at: http://www.nba-interactivemeeting.com
---------------------------------------
Correspondence
Part 1 | Back2Text
--------------------------------------------------
X-Sender: kennedyd@kennedyd.pobox.stanford.edu
Date: Tue, 3 Sep 2002 15:07:15 -0700
To: Alexei Koudinov <koudin@med.pfu.edu.ru>
From: Don Kennedy <kennedyd@stanford.edu>
Subject: Re: update on Selkoe conflict
of interest: four items to proof conflict
Dear Dr. Koudinov:
The failure of Dr. Selkoe to enter
a conflict of interest disclosure on his paper with Dr. Hardy came about
because of a procedural error at Science. Their review was submitted
by mail, not electronically; a faxed conflict of interest form should have
been sent the authors, but was not. At our request Dr. Selkoe promptly
submitted the form in which he declares his Directorship at Elan.
We will publish his declaration as a Correction, with an explanation absolving
him of responsibility for the failure.
The material I have just received
from you contains a specific charge related to the timing of the Hardy/Selkoe
review. I am pleased to tell you that it is not confirmed by the
facts. The review was invited over a year ago, submitted in April,
reviewed very favorably, and returned to Science late in May. It
was accepted then and scheduled for July 19th. That schedule was
fitted to the AD meeting and not to your dEbate letter,which had not been
read by any of those responsible for the scheduling.
I must tell you that I found your
claim outlandish -- enough so that it casts serious doubt on this entire
campaign
Sincerely yours
Donald Kennedy
Editor-in-Chief
--------------------------------------------------
At 12:23 AM 9/1/2002 +0000, Alexei
Koudinov wrote:
Dear Dr.Kennedy,
I would like to update you
on the matter of my early August inquiry on D Selkoe break of Science non-disclosure
policy. The facts that I would like to bring to your attention, however,
are extending far beyond my initial request.
These issue are specified below and
are accompanied by my comments (in purple):
Item one:
--------------
Another document (in addition to
The Sunday Business Post article of August 18, 2002 that I informed you
about two weeks ago) that describes Dr.Selkoe conflict.
------------------------
"Science for Sale : A Harvard researcher
stands to profit from a product he "independently" reviewed for the National
Institutes of Health. The scientific community, increasingly dependent
on corporate money, has no clear way to handle such conflicts."
The Boston Phoenix, April 29, 1999.
by Tinker Ready
Article URL: http://www.bostonphoenix.com/archives/1999/documents/00521742.htm
PLEASE NOTE that the above article
cites Science magazine story (published in 1992) of Selkoe 'Conflict of
Interest'.
(the above URL should begin from
' http:// ' and end with ' htm '. So, in case you have problem with opening
the above link by simple clicking on it please copy and paste it into the
URL bar of your web browser; be sure address starts and ends as indicated
above)
You may be interested to know that
I found this article as a search result at scholar database. This article
is a part of the reading of the course on 'Activism in Medicine' as a part
of ethics for medical students.
------------------------
Item two:
--------------
A description of Alzheimer's disease
hallmarks and therapeutic targets at Athena Diagnostics web site, the part
of Elan where Selkoe is a director (you should notice that Selkoe was a
major shareholder and founder of Athena Diagnostics). The citation follows:
------------------------
Neuro-CAST sessions: Neuropathology
of Alzheimer's disease
http://www.neurocast.com/site/content/sessions_Neuro_Alzheimer's.shtml#
( the above URL should begin from
' http:// ' and end with ' .shtml# ' )
------------------------
PLEASE NOTE THAT one of sentences
on page 2 of this document states: " In a review of a study by Naslund
et al., Dennis Selkoe, MD, an Alzheimer's disease specialist from Harvard
Medical School and Brigham and Women's Hospital, states, "Abeta accumulation
correlates quantitatively with the degree of dementia.""
The above thus indicates that D Selkoe
review articles ( about 10 review articles over the last 3 years ), including
the latest one in Science magazine, serve to market D Selkoe company products,
while there is no mention (in any of D Selkoe review article) that he is
a director of Elan (i.e. Athena) and that is his clear commercial interest
to support his company products.
Though, supporting products seems
not to be the only support. He also support Elan people as indicated by
the following item 3.
Item 3.
---------
This item seems to be the coolest
one and may represent great story idea (or a part of the story) for Science
coverage. I would suggest you to ask the author of the above Boston Phoenix
article "Science for Sale" Tinker Ready to write this for you. Tinker is
a freelance health and science writer who writes for many magazines including
Nature Medicine and WebMD. You can check her works and her contacts at
her web site: http://tinkerr.home.attbi.com/
The facts follow:
One of the paragraph of the last
year (2001) CNN report at 'Career section' states in regard to the news
of Elans' Schenks' development of the Alzheimer's vaccination approach:
"And it's the kind of news that made
Schenk winner of this year's coveted Potamkin Prize from the American Academy
of Neurology (AAN). "It was wonderful," Schenk says, sounding as if he
just may have managed to be in the moment when he accepted the award on
May 8 at the AAN's annual meeting in Philadelphia. The Potamkin -- seen
by some as a potential precursor to Nobel consideration -- is a peer award,
and the AAN has some 17,500 neurology professionals in its membership."
Another document (D Selkoe resume
at ISI HighlyCited.Com, attached for your convenience as Acrobat .PDF file)
indicates that Selkoe is... a "Potamkin Prize committee chair".
You can verify the above at some
official report of the AAN by Dr.Roger Rosenberg (attached as .PDF imprint
of the word document), editor-in-chief of Archives of Neurology, former
Potamkin Prize Committee chair (till 1999), and former AAN president. In
this document Dr.Rosenberg is calling Potamkin prize as a "Nobel Prize
in the field of dementia research" and a "predictor of future Nobel Prizes".
He is also mentioning Schenk award and Selkoe chairman status. There is,
however, no indication that Selkoe refused to participate in the committee
when his Elan employee was seeking the award and succeeded to get it.
The above severely contradicts academic
ethics and AAN conflict of interest policy, and indicates the disaster
for AAN and Potamkin Prize prestige. If so, in my view yet there is only
one way to handle the problem. To make it public and distance from Selkoe
break of ethical norms.
Item 4.
---------
In addition to serving as "Potamkin
Prize committee chair" D. Selkoe serves as a reviewer for Alzheimer's association,
as his ISI resume (attached) indicates (and possible for many other grant
awarding institutions), and as an editorial board member (and thus likely
reviewer) of at least 13 biomedical journals (as indicates D Selkoe attached
resume).
D. Selkoe hiding and not disclosing
his close industrial financial affiliation breaks another academic norm
set for editors of biomedical journals and for reviewers (of grant proposals
and articles by others).
I BELIEVE THAT THE above provides
strong evidence of D.Selkoe conflict and would caution you against taking
D. Selkoe academia/industry conflict as a simple non-disclosure of his
financial interest with regard to his review article at Science magazine.
You may be interested to know that
there is another issue that people are asking about and would like to know
the answer. This question is based on the notion that D.Selkoe and J. Hardy
review article was published in July 19, 2002 issue of Science in response
on my and my colleagues dEbate letter of June 25, 2002. My subject colleagues
do see the above link. The only explanation they have is that Selkoe's
article was in some way lobbied at Science to get published in such short
period of time. People do not believe that Selkoe article followed regular
Science publication schedule, as another review article by Hardy and colleagues
(on which we wrote our dEbate letter) was on the subject similar to the
review article by Selkoe.
If so, you should know that Selkoe's
Elan has Washington, DC based co-director dedicated to lobbying the company
interest. This was noted more then four years ago in Nature ("News in Brief"
15 January 1998, Vol. 391, 220 - 221).
Please note, that I have no competing
interest and that I have no personal conflict with D.Selkoe. I simple feel
responsible for the development of my field, and share your legacy that
""science is a community venture dependent upon shared values, and trust
is one of them". I also follow the Society for Neuroscience (where both
I and D Selkoe are members) document on "Responsible conduct regarding
scientific communication" (attached as .PDF document) that D.Selkoe seems
to break as author and as editor.
I request you to confirm this communication.
With best regards for Happy and Prosperous
New Academic year 2002/2003 !
Sincerely,
Alexei Koudinov
P.S. Below is another latest news
on D. Selkoe:
------------------------
The Royal Netherlands Academy of
Arts and Sciences has awarded the Dr A.H. Heineken Prize for Medicine 2002
(USD 150,000) to Professor Dennis J. Selkoe, M.D. Harvard Medical School,
Boston, MA, United States
URL of the prize announcement and
award ceremony date:
http://www.knaw.nl/heinekenprizes/pr_2002/02_02uk.htm
--------------------------------------------------
At 08:13 AM 5/8/2002 -0700, Donald
Kennedy wrote:
Dear Dr. Koudinov:
We are looking into the matter you
raise, and will respond when our evaluation is complete.
Sincerely yours
Donald Kennedy
Editor-in-Chief
--------------------------------------------------
At 11:04 AM 8/5/2002 +0300, Alexei
Koudinov wrote:
Dear Dr.Kennedy,
I am writing regarding recent review
article by Hardy and Selkoe (Science, Volume 297, Number 5580, Issue of
19 Jul 2002, pp. 353-356).
This article does not include a note
on Dr.Selkoe financial conflict of interests, despite the facts (easily
accessible as a search for "Selkoe" at http://www.google.com
) that indicate such conflict (1, 2, 3).
The above suggests that Dr.Selkoe
did not declare the conflict of interests and thus breached the Science
policy (4) and the public trust and the spirit of openness (5).
I plan to discuss the above issue
along with another instance of Dr.Selkoe violation of competing interest
policy [of the Nature journal (6)] in a separate appeal to the scientific
community and to the public.
In doing so I would like to know
whether Dr.Selkoe declared his conflict of interest before his review article
went to press at Science. If not I would like to know whether Science will
fix this case of the breach of the public confidence. I would like to have
this information, so, I could minimize the inconvenience to Science.
With best regards,
Alexei Koudinov, MD, PhD
References:
1. Yahoo! - Insider Trades - SELKOE,
DENNIS J. Available at: http://biz.yahoo.com/t/36/1063.html
2. Yahoo! - Market Guide - Elan Corporation,
plc Available at: http://biz.yahoo.com/p/e/eln.html ( Then click on "More
from Market Guide on Officers & Directors: Expanded List" link to have
"Selkoe, M.D., Dennis J." listed as Elan Director )
3. Dennis Selkoe, M.D., Elan Director.
Available at:
http://www.elan.com/InvestorRelations/Overview/Biography/DennisSelkoe.asp?ComponentID=1547&SourcePageID=1662
(please note that the above URL will
likely become truncated in your e.mail (as soon as many e.mail programs
truncate email messages' lines at some length) and thus will not be executable
upon the mouse click. In such a case please copy and paste the above URL
into your web browser address window. The address should begin with " http://
" and end with " =1662 "
4. Science Conflict of Interest form.
Available at: http://www.sciencemag.org/feature/contribinfo/prep/conflict.pdf
5. Smith R. Beyond conflict of interest.
BMJ 1998;317:291-292, Available at: http://bmj.com/cgi/content/short/317/7154/291
6. In our earlier communication with
Nature regarding recent Nature article by Selkoe et al [Walsh, D.M. et
al. Naturally secreted oligomers of amyloid b-protein potently inhibit
hippocampal long-term potentiation in vivo. Nature 416, 535-539. (2002)]
we brought editors' attention to the possibility of Dr.Selkoe competing
interests. The authors response (mediated by Nature and dated 23 April
2002) was the following:
"Dr Selkoe no longer has has any
connection with the companies you list (AK: Athena and Elan) because of
the 1997 ruling by Harvard University prohibiting such connections among
its faculty members."
The above statement contradicts recently
discovered and cited above documents (1,2,3).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Back2Text |