The boundary between scientific exchange and marketing in payer presentations is increasingly blurred, creating significant compliance and enforcement risks. While payers demand real-world evidence, comparative studies, and economic models beyond FDA-approved labeling, manufacturers must ensure all shared information is truthful, non-misleading, properly contextualized, and backed by competent and reliable scientific evidence.
Key pitfalls include:
Crossing into promotion can trigger FDA, FTC, OIG, DOJ, and plaintiff scrutiny, with false claims liability a real risk. To mitigate exposure, companies should:
The DOJ’s healthcare fraud task force has prioritized this area, making compliance essential not only to avoid regulatory letters but also subpoenas, litigation, and treble damages. Proper safeguards—including playbooks, legal review, and compliance monitoring—protect companies from costly enforcement actions.
Bottom line: Scientific exchange with payers is permitted and necessary, but once it drifts into marketing, companies face severe legal and financial consequences.
Published on 4 days, 20 hours ago
If you like Podbriefly.com, please consider donating to support the ongoing development.
Donate