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. 2022 Apr 21;8(5):e1325.
doi: 10.1097/TXD.0000000000001325. eCollection 2022 May.

The Sun Is Still Shining: Nature of Industry Payments to Transplant Surgeons From 2014 to 2019

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The Sun Is Still Shining: Nature of Industry Payments to Transplant Surgeons From 2014 to 2019

Conner V Lombardi et al. Transplant Direct. .

Abstract

Background: Established in 2013, the Open Payments Program (OPP) mandated that medical device and pharmaceutical manufacturers submit record of any financial incentive given to physicians to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which is in turn made publicly available. This study aims to characterize these payments to transplant surgeons over the first 6 y of OPP data.

Methods: The study sample included all physicians who received at least one nonresearch payment as transplant surgeons to the OPP. To capture transplant surgeons who may be listed under their pipeline specialty, the American Society of Transplant Surgeons member directory as of January 2021 was queried. Payments were analyzed temporally, geographically, and by payment type, physician, and industry payer.

Results: In total, payments totaling $15 661 536 were made to 1335 transplant surgeons over the study period. The mean payment was $436.90 (SD, $1760), and the median payment was $52.94 (interquartile range, $18.29-$159.80). The top contributing companies were Intuitive Surgical, Inc.; Gilead Sciences, Inc.; and Novartis Pharmaceuticals. Only 5.3% ($827 236) was paid toward faculty or as a speaker for a nonaccredited and noncertified continuing education program and honorarium. Educational payments came in at $1 233 141 (7.9%) over the study period. $13 750 828.60 (87.8%) of the payments were for other categories (consulting fees, food and beverages, etc). Organ transplant and procurement region 7 and 8 transplant surgeons received the highest median payments during the study period.

Conclusions: This study is the first to characterize the payments made to transplant surgeons since the passage of the Sunshine Act. Further studies are needed to understand and interpret the relationship between industry and transplant surgeons, as the payments may or may not translate to influence in medical decisions or use of medical devices.

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Figures

FIGURE 1.
FIGURE 1.
Breakdown of total payments by nature of payment for each year of the study period in 2019 USD. USD, United States Dollar.
FIGURE 2.
FIGURE 2.
Geographic distribution of median payments by state. Map scale ranges from $0 to $180.00 in 2019 USD. USD, United States Dollar.
FIGURE 3.
FIGURE 3.
Geographic distribution of median payments to transplant surgeons by the Organ Procurement and Transplant Network (OPTN) region. For the purposes of this study, Vermont was included in region 9, and Virginia was included in region 11, as it was not feasible to separate these groups into 2 regions. Map scale is from $0 to $100 and is in 2019 USD. USD, United States Dollar.
FIGURE 4.
FIGURE 4.
Total amount of payments from top 30 industry payers over the study period with breakdown by nature of payment. Companies entered with different international subsidiaries were kept separate for the purpose of this analysis. All reported amounts are in 2019 USD. USD, United States Dollar.
FIGURE 5.
FIGURE 5.
Total amount of payments to top 50 transplant surgeons over the study period with breakdown by nature of payments. Physician identifiers were removed for privacy purposes. All amounts are reported in 2019 USD. USD, United States Dollar.

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