Abstract

1582 Background: Payments from the pharmaceutical industry to US health care providers were made public through Open Payments in 2013. Since then, industry payments to individual physicians have been studied extensively, but payments to hospitals remain uncharacterized. The goal of this study was to examine trends in industry payments to US cancer centers. Methods: We identified all US cancer centers that were National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) members or were National Cancer Institute (NCI) comprehensive cancer center as of 2019. Each institution was manually mapped to Open Payments, which contains industry payment data. Where applicable, subsidiary hospitals were included with the parent center. Among the NCCN centers, we used National Plan and Provider Enumeration System data to identify medical oncologists practicing there. Oncologists were linked to Open Payments by name and address. We analyzed “research payments” (RP), which include payments related to preclinical and clinical research, and “general payments” (GP), which include non-research-related payments in categories such as speaker fees, consulting fees, meals, grants, charitable contributions, and licensing fees. We ascertained public research support from NIH data, and included all research project grants. We used correlation analysis and linear regression models to assess the association between industry payments to a cancer center and to oncologists practicing at that center. All dollar values were inflation-adjusted to 2019 dollars using the Consumer Price Index for medical care from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics. Results: Overall industry RP to US cancer centers increased from $527 million in 2014 to $653 million in 2019, while GP increased from $346 million to $786 million. NCI research funding increased from $1,397 million in 2014 to $1,583 million in 2019 (13.3% increase) while overall industry payments (RP+GP) increased from $873 million to $1,439 million (64.8% increase). Industry payments were highest as a portion of total income (industry + NCI) at MD Anderson (64.2%) and lowest at St. Jude (0.1%). Among NCCN institutions, industry payments to cancer centers and the oncologists practicing at those centers were correlated (coefficient = 0.382). A $1,000 increase in GP to a cancer center from a given pharmaceutical company was associated with a $1.00 ($0.61 - $1.30) increase in GP from that company to oncologists at that cancer center. Conclusions: From 2014-2019, cancer center funding from industry sources grew quickly, driven by an increase in non-research payments, and now approaches the amount of public research funding cancer centers receive. Cancer center acceptance of industry payments is associated with increased industry payments to its employed physicians, which are known to sway prescribing practices. These trends raise concerns regarding the ability of these institutions to fulfill their public missions.

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