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  • Recognizing and Managing Our Conflict of Interest
  • Laura Jean Bierut

One day I found that I was listed as an inventor on a patent application, and this event has changed my view of conflict of interest in academic medicine and industry.

My patent grew out of my investigation into genetic contributions to the development of addiction. My colleagues and I successfully applied to a program offered through the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) for a large–scale genetic study of smoking. This project combined the skill of our academic research team with the expertise of our industry partner, a high tech genetics company, to search for genetic contributions to smoking. Our university–based academic team brought in knowledge of the disease under study (smoking and nicotine dependence) and DNA samples from subjects who consented to participate in genetic studies. The industry partner contributed the large–scale genotyping. NIDA played the role of matchmaker for this arranged marriage between academia and industry.

I entered this project with my background as a professor in psychiatry at Washington University School of Medicine. From my viewpoint in a medical school academic setting, the major products produced by professors were papers published in academic journals, research programs funded by grants, courses offered to students, and clinical training provided for residents. Though there are parallels with industry, many differences exist. The greatest contrast was in the speed of the project and the view on “products” which were to be developed. Our industry partner had clear short–term goals and milestones in this research program, and I was impressed with the pace of their work and the clarity of their vision. This speed was in contrast to the typical pace of scientific decision making in an academic medical center where many options must be carefully considered before action may be taken. With our industry partner, this project took less than two years from start to finish, which included publication.

Towards the end of our collaborative research project, our industry partner applied for a patent, “Markers for Addiction”, which described our genetic findings as a possible diagnostic test for a person’s addictive potential, and I was listed as an inventor. The patent application was initiated and submitted by our industry partner, and then my colleagues and I were informed of the application. This patent came as a surprise to me from my academic viewpoint. My academic colleagues and I considered our results in this study to be a discovery about the genetics of developing nicotine dependence, which added to scientific knowledge about addiction. We had not conceptualized the results of our study as an invention, and this patent application was a concrete example of the contrast of cultures between academia and industry. Our partner identified a potential product, a predictive test for developing a nicotine dependence that could [End Page 67] someday be marketed, and the patent application reflected our industry partner’s logical goal of protecting the intellectual property from our discovery.

Once I was listed as an inventor, a cascade of events unfolded, which gave me further insights into the world of industry and issues in conflict of interest. After I informed my university oversight board about the patent, I was told that I had a conflict of interest. Prior to this patent, I viewed a conflict of interest as something which was improper and to be avoided. Overnight I became one of “those people” who had to add a disclaimer slide during presentations or publications. I was concerned that others would question my scientific judgment. However, my conflict of interest experience soon changed my viewpoint.

A conflict of interest is a situation where a personal interest presents a risk of influencing one’s professional duties. Once I started to examine my potential conflict of interest resulting from this patent, I began to realize that a conflict of interest was present in my academic job and did not require a connection with industry. We all know of famous cases of falsified scientific results which were published in high impact journals. The falsification of results is often the consequence of the inherent conflict of interest within research groups—a high impact publication is more likely...

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