News:
Conflicts on HHS stem cell council
Posted by Bob Grant
[Entry posted at 28th April 2008 09:04 PM GMT]

Nearly half the voting members of a Department of Health and Human Services stem cell advisory council have financial conflicts of interest despite the committee's pledge to limit these types of conflicts, according to a survey conducted by a science watchdog group.

The Center for Science in the Public Interest polled the 25 voting members of HHS's Advisory Council on Blood Stem Cell Transplantation (ACBSCT) and found that 11 reported having financial ties to stem cell and umbilical cord blood banking companies, drug makers, and the transplantation industry.

For example, Frederick Appelbaum, who is the head of medical oncology at the University of Washington, has relationships with Merck, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Wyeth, and Genzyme. Another council member, Richard Champlin, is the chairman of the University of Texas in Houston's Stem Cell Transplantation and Cellular Therapy Department, but also serves on the medical advisory board of Stemcyte, an international company that runs cord blood banking programs.

According to the Center for Science in the Public Interest, the HHS official in charge of the ACBSCT said that none of the initial applicants to the council (of which there were over 100) were screened for conflicts of interest even though the council's charter clearly states that, "Any member of the Council who has an employment, governance, or financial affiliation with a donor center, recruitment organization, transplant center, or cord blood bank will be prohibited from participating in any decision that materially affects the donor center, recruitment organization, transplant center, or cord blood bank. The number of members with such affiliations on the Council shall be limited."

The ACBSCT was formed in 2006 to advise HHS policy makers on cord blood donation and stem cell transplantation science and met for the first time this past January. The council is meeting today and tomorrow (Apr 28 and 29) in Rockville, Maryland to discuss cord blood donor recruitment practices, blood bank accreditation, and stem cell transplantation practices.

For FREE access to this news story and more, you must register.

Not yet registered? Get free access
 

The article you are attempting to read is only available to registered users of The Scientist. Registration is FREE and only takes a few seconds.

 
 

Email

Password

> Forgot Password?
> FAQ
> Subscribe

 
Not yet registered? Get free access
 

Create your MyScientist account and access all of The Scientist's free content, tools and life science email newsletters, including:

 

> The current month’s print issue

> Daily & Bi-weekly e-mail newsletters

> Newsblogs with breaking headlines

> The Scientist Community

> Exclusive web extras

> The Scientist Careers

 

Premium content from The Scientist Archive, a comprehensive resource of over 22 years of past life science coverage, is available only by subscription. Subscribe today and get unlimited access

 

 
LATEST NEWS