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ACCOUNTABILITY: Kuklo, Target of Army Probe, a Top Recipient of Medtronic Travel

By Nick Schwellenbach and M.B. Pell and Aaron Mehta | May 13, 2009, 4:03 pm

image Dr. Timothy R. Kuklo is an associate professor of orthopedic surgery at the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. (Courtesy of Washington University.) If you read today’s New York Times, you’re likely familiar with the story of former Army surgeon Timothy R. Kuklo, a paid consultant to Medtronic, Inc., a medical device developer and manufacturer. An Army investigation found that Kuklo overstated the benefits of Infuse, a drug sold by Medtronic used by the military to treat combat-related bone injuries, and that he falsified information and forged the signatures of colleagues as co-authors in a British medical journal article. In response to Army findings, the journal retracted the article, the Times reported. But what you don’t know is Medtronic paid for thousands of dollars worth of Kuklo’s trips to places like Coral Gables, Florida, and Scottsdale, Arizona, while he was working for the Army.

Between 2001 and 2006, Medtronic paid for at least 15 trips taken by Dr. Kuklo, worth more than $13,000, according to travel disclosure records obtained from the Office of Government Ethics. Kuklo, now an associate professor at Washington University medical school in St. Louis, took more than 20 privately-funded trips.

“There’s no lack of creativity in how the industry tries to influence studies,” said Shahram Ahari, a medical ethicist and former drug sales representative. “This is what marketing is about, you take people with that position of respect and credibility, and every once in a while they spin one out that helps the marketing, and it’s hard to distinguish the marketing from the science.”

Kuklo was one of the Defense Department’s top recipients of Medtronic travel money, according to an analysis of Pentagon travel data being conducted by the Center for Public Integrity, Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism, and the Associated Press.

A former colleague of Kuklo’s at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Dr. David W. Polly Jr., took even more expensive trips than Kuklo. Polly went on at least 12 Medtronic-sponsored trips costing about $30,000, including a $10,000 trip to Switzerland. Now at the University of Minnesota School of Medicine, Polly defended Kuklo in the Times’ article, describing Kuklo’s data as “strong.”

Medtronic paid more than $90,000 for about 80 Defense Department trips from 1998 through 2007, according to the Office of Government Ethics data.

Kuklo, Polly, and Medtronic did not respond to requests for comment from the Center today.

In an earlier query about Medtronic’s sponsorship of Defense personnel travel, a company representative sent an e-mail response in March. “Medtronic pays certain travel and training expenses for physicians as part of the normal course of educating physicians on the safe and effective use of Medtronic products,” according to the statement. “This training gives physicians knowledge and skills important in treating patients suffering from chronic conditions who can benefit from Medtronic devices and therapies. Expenses reimbursed by Medtronic follow strict guidelines associated with our own Code of Conduct and U.S. Business Conduct Standards as well as the AdvaMed Code of Ethics. In addition, the Department of Defense has its own ethics standards in place in which all requests for educational support are reviewed by ethics officers at the Pentagon prior to authorization.”

Look for more on the Pentagon’s travel habits in coming weeks, when the Center, Medill, and AP release our final report on privately funded travel by the Defense Department.

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  1. Posted by: getaclue on May 14, 2009, 2:04 pm

    hmmm… a whopping $13,000 in 5 years for 15 trips. WOW that is really HUGE!  Kinda like that $1000 toliet at the pentagon…

    Less than $1,000 a trip and this is what you write about??? Seriously??? Not global warming, foreclosure rates, number of troops in Iraq/Afghanistan, nukes in N. Korea but this???

    Must be slow days for you guys?

    Keep in mind Uncle Sam and the same folks at Walter Reed who are lambasting him also approved these trips, all had to be done with the Army’s approval. It’s called “travel orders” and anyone who travels while on active duty for a military function has them. If Uncle Sam and the folks at Wally World had an issue back then why didn’t they NOT approve the trips???

    Speaking of Wally World - they lost my medical records - not once but TWICE, and had no record of my surgery - ANYWHERE!!!! Thankfully, between my nice surgical scar and my surgeon and my own records we where able to go back and “re-create” portions my file so I could retire.

    I wouldn’t count on Wally World’s “so-called” investigation to be all that unbiased.

    Didn’t Kuklo retire in 2007? But he is being held to public affair mandates that changed in 2008 - after his retirement - did they notify him or is he suppose to guess?

    Yes, yes, I know - Uncle Sam at it’s finest and yet we sit and ponder as to how Walter Reed got the nickname “Wally World”

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