Penalized NIH Researcher Retires

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The senior NIH researcher who became a symbol of the agency’s improper entanglements with drugmakers - and whose lasting presence on the federal payroll enraged members of Congress -has retired from the government, The Los Angeles Times reports.

Dr. P. “Trey” Sunderland III accepted about $612,000 in consulting and speaking fees from Pfizer and about $200,000 from other companies from 1998 to 2004, all without getting required NIH approvals in advance. He pleaded guilty five months ago to a federal conflict-of-interest charge and agreed to pay $300,000 to the government and to perform community service.

Sunderland’s retirement surfaced in a probation report filed Thursday with a U.S. District Court in Baltimore. The probation officer, Rasheed J. Tahir, wrote that Sunderland “is now privately practicing psychiatry.” Sunderland has paid the government about one-third of the $300,000 in restitution and performed three-fourths of his required community service, the report said.

Sunderland, 55, a psychiatrist who specialized in researching Alzheimer’s disease, had remained on the federal payroll through March. His case was among scores that prompted a sweeping ban of drug-company consulting fees and other industry compensation to NIH employees. The ban, which was ordered in 2005 by the NIH director, was fought by many scientists at the agency who wanted the income from the drug companies.

The timing of the ban is of renewed relevance for Sunderland: He told colleagues at a national psychiatric research conference in December 2006 that he was a consultant to Pfizer and another drug-maker, AstraZeneca. Conference materials also show that Sunderland reported that he had received honoraria, typically fees for speaking or making appearances, from Pfizer, Bristol-Myers Squibb and Janssen Pharmaceuticals, a unit of J&J.

Reached by telephone at the NIH headquarters in Bethesda, Md., Deputy Director Raynard S. Kington declined to say whether the agency had granted Sunderland special permission to accept compensation from any of the four drug companies. Sunderland’s lawyer, Robert F. Muse, declined comment on his client’s disclosures at the December conference. He also declined to discuss terms of Sunderland’s discharge and retirement.

You can read the full story here.[tags]Conflicts Of Interest, NIH, Trey Sunderland[/tags]

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