Facing a growing backlash over secret adverse event reports on medical devices, the outgoing commissioner of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) pledged this week to start working to make hundreds of thousands of previously undisclosed reports freely available to the public for the first time.
FDA Commissioner Dr. Scott Gottlieb, who is expected to step down on April 5, said on Twitter on Wednesday that the agency is "now prioritizing making ALL of this data available."
Gottlieb's social media comment came in response to a Kaiser Health News report published earlier that day by NBC News that said the FDA had quietly allowed more than 2 million reports of problems related to medical devices to slip into hidden files called "alternative summary reports" since the start of 2014. Doctors use injury-report data to inform decisions about which devices to use.
Previously, the contents of those summary reports were only available through the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests, which can take years to receive and be subject to arbitrary redactions of key information.
FDA spokeswoman Deborah Kotz said Thursday via e-mail that the agency is working to make summary reports prior to 2017 available without an FOIA request. The agency has greatly whittled down the number of reporting "exemptions" that allow summary reports to be filed in the place of full reports on each incident.
"A total of 108 exemptions had filed been since the inception of the Alternative Summary Reporting program in 1997," Kotz wrote. "Only 3 exemptions are still active today, with plans to fully phase out the program this year. In most cases, the FDA revoked exemptions due to changing circumstances. … In a small number of instances, the FDA revoked exemptions due to the voluntary withdrawal from the program by manufacturers or where the conditions of the exemption were no longer met."
Redacted reports
In the past, the FDA routinely redacted information in public filings that could tip off the public to the existence of summary reports, such as the summary's approval number, which could be used to FOIA the data and understand how many other summaries exist, since the report numbers are sequential.
For example, on Feb. 24, 2014, the FDA allowed Minnesota-run Medtronic PLC to summarize an undisclosed number of adverse events pertaining to its controversial Infuse Bone Graft biotech product for lower-back surgery. Information on those adverse events was collected as part of a study more than five years earlier and was summarized in a "marker" report whose exemption-approval number was redacted. Medtronic has said the reports were withheld mistakenly but that the information in them would not have added to public knowledge about Infuse.