United States Ex Rel. Cantekin v. University of Pittsburgh

192 F.3d 402, 1999 WL 768446
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedSeptember 29, 1999
Docket98-3552
StatusUnknown
Cited by1 cases

This text of 192 F.3d 402 (United States Ex Rel. Cantekin v. University of Pittsburgh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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United States Ex Rel. Cantekin v. University of Pittsburgh, 192 F.3d 402, 1999 WL 768446 (3d Cir. 1999).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT

COWEN, Circuit Judge.

This case concerns a medical researcher’s failure to disclose his industry funding on a number of grant applications that he submitted to the National Institutes of Health (NIH). The undisclosed funding included several million dollars from pharmaceutical companies making the drugs that the NIH paid the researcher to evaluate.

On this appeal we must determine when a private party can properly bring a suit under the False Claims Act’s qui tam provision, 31 U.S.C. § 3730(b), which allows an individual to sue on the government’s behalf for damages caused by another party’s false claims. Congress has changed several times the rules limiting when a private party can bring a qui tam suit under the False Claims Act. We must resolve which of two versions of the Act apply to the various grant applications that the researcher submitted to the NIH and what effect each version has on the claims it controls.

A recent Supreme Court decision, Hughes Aircraft Co. v. United States ex rel. Schumer, 520 U.S. 939, 117 S.Ct. 1871, 138 L.Ed.2d 135 (1997), discussed the ret-roactivity of the 1986 Grassley Amendments, Congress’s latest change to the Act’s qui tam rules. Applying Hughes, the District Court concluded that Erdem Cantekin, the appellant, could not pursue qui tam claims based on grant applications that Charles Bluestone, the researcher and appellee, submitted before October 27, 1986. Although our reasoning differs from the District Court’s, we will affirm its ruling on these applications submitted in 1986 or earlier.

For Cantekin’s remaining qui tam claim, which was based on an application submitted after the effective date of the 1986 amendments, the District Court granted summary judgment in favor of Bluestone and the other defendants because the Court concluded that Bluestone did not knowingly omit his industry funding from the application. Contrary to the District Court, we conclude that genuine factual disputes preclude summary judgment on whether Bluestone knowingly submitted a false claim.1

I

Both the appellant, Erdem Cantekin, and the appellee, Charles Bluestone, are professors of otolaryngology at the University of Pittsburgh’s medical school and have worked together on research since the early 1970s. As part of their collaboration, they created the Otitis Media Research Center to investigate acute otitis media and otitis media with effusion, two ear diseases common in children.

Much of the research they conducted together focused on testing the effectiveness of various antibiotics, such as amoxi-cillin, in treating the different types of otitis media. This research was particularly significant because while the drugs are widely used, controversy continues about the desirability and effectiveness of using antibiotics for these conditions. Not [405]*405only are there medical reasons for worrying about unwarranted use of antibiotics, but also according to Cantekin’s brief, the public spends over half a billion dollars annually buying antibiotics to treat the various forms of otitis media.

To pursue the research on antibiotics, Bluestone submitted numerous grant applications to the NIH throughout the 1970s and 1980s and ultimately was awarded approximately $17.4 million. At the same time, Bluestone began receiving funding from various pharmaceutical companies to test the effectiveness of them antibiotics in treating otitis media. Collectively, this industry funding totaled approximately $3.4 million.

Cantekin claims that as early as 1976, he raised with Bluestone his failure to list his industry funding on his NIH grant applications, but Bluestone allegedly brushed him off, saying that he was not going to tell the “federal feather merchants” because it was “none of their business” and would “muddy up the waters.” App. at 523. Cantekin also disputed Bluestone’s interpretation of research results, in particular the results of several industry-funded studies.

In May of 1987, Cantekin wrote to the NIH complaining about Bluestone’s conduct, but the NIH chose to take no action, instead deferring to an investigation conducted by the University of Pittsburgh. When the university announced on June 22, 1987 that it had cleared Bluestone of any wrongdoing, the NIH dropped the matter. Dissatisfied with the university’s investigation and with the NIH’s reliance on it, Cantekin later testified before the United States House of Representatives at hearings investigating scientific fraud in federally funded research.

While the congressional report from the hearings was pending, the NIH decided to conduct its own inquiry into Bluestone’s conduct. The resulting report by Howard Hyatt, then director of the NIH’s Division of Management Survey and Review, concluded that Bluestone and the Otitis Media Research Center had “not generally disclosed to NIH the extent of its industry-sponsored research.” App. at 508. But Hyatt continued that since the grant instructions were ambiguous, Bluestone’s conduct was excusable. Hyatt also rejected Cantekin’s claim that Bluestone’s research results were biased.

On September 10, 1990, the House released its report, which discussed ten cases where grant recipients had engaged in misconduct. See H.R.Rep. No. 101-688, Are Scientific Misconduct and Conflict of Interest Hazardous to Our Health?, 19th Report, Committee on Government Operations, 101st Cong., 2d Sess. (Sept. 10, 1990). Bluestone’s case was included among the ten. The House report excoriated both the University of Pittsburgh’s investigation as well as Hyatt’s report and challenged many of their findings. Several months later, in December of 1990, the NIH issued a new report by the agency’s recently created Office of Scientific Integrity (OSI), which had reopened the agency’s inquiry into Bluestone’s conduct. Dr. Suzanne Hadley, then Acting Deputy Director of OSI, was in charge of this second NIH investigation. Her affidavit explained that the OSI report

recommended that the Director of NIH require that Dr. Bluestone be place on a period of five years of administrative oversight for having failed to disclose his private pharmaceutical company research to NIH and having analyzed the data from NIH-funded research in a manner biased towards the effectiveness of the antibiotics he had evaluated with public monies.

App. at 481.

To illuminate how Bluestone’s failure to disclose his industry funding could have affected the NIH’s approval of his grants, Cantekin provided the following overview of the application process. Applications are first assigned to one of several institutes within the NIH. In Bluestone’s case, his applications were sent to the National Institute for Neurological, Communication [406]*406Disorders, and Stroke, which then forwarded them to the Communication Disorders Review Committee (CDRC), one of the review committees within the institute. A review committee is the body primarily responsible for evaluating the merits of applications like Bluestone’s. Each review committee is composed of experts who are not NIH employees and are paid per diem for evaluating the applications. Frequently, the review committee members have themselves received NIH grants in conducting their own research.

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