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Related Topics >> Merck | Controversy | Charles Grassley

Congress: Were Enhance results secret?

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Finally, someone asked the question we've been wanting to ask ourselves: Even if the Enhance study data remained blinded, could Merck or Schering-Plough have divined its overall sway? Sen. Charles Grassley, who's been shooting out letters to the two companies at the rate of at least two a week, made the query in another round of correspondence yesterday.

The question of who knew what exactly when has been central to the whole Vytorin controversy. As the world waited for the Enhance results, did Merck and Schering execs know Vytorin didn't slow the progression of heart disease any better than simvastatin alone? Did Schering execs know anything, for instance, when they sold millions worth of stock last May? Did the companies know anything while they were pushing Vytorin via a big-time TV ad blitz?

Grassley's counterparts in the House also posted new letters this week, asking about some posts on a website for drug reps, Café Pharma. One post last March said, "have a buddy at [Schering-Plough Research Institute]. He says that the study is a bust." Who else, Congress wants to know, might this "buddy" have told?

- find links to the House letters at Energy and Commerce's website
- read the Grassley piece at the Wall Street Journal Health Blog
- check out the Café Pharma item

Related Articles:
FDA to review Enhance study. Report
Congress promises Vytorin hearings. Report
Merck, Schering's Vytorin fails trial. Report

More stories about Merck   Controversy   Charles Grassley  

Comments

shame on you for reporting gossip from cafe pharma -- poor reporting on your part!

Seriously? Poor reporting? They linked to letters on the government websites, a post on the WSJ, and an opinion on Cafe Pharma. That is hardly poor reporting.

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