Bias, Spin, and Misreporting: Time for Full Access to Trial Protocols and Results
article has not abstract
Published in the journal:
. PLoS Med 5(11): e230. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.0050230
Category:
Perspective
doi:
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.0050230
Summary
article has not abstract
Although randomized trials provide key guidance for how we practice medicine, trust in their published results has been eroded in recent years due to several high-profile cases of alleged data suppression, misrepresentation, and manipulation [1–5, 39]. While most publicized cases have involved pharmaceutical industry trials, accumulating empiric evidence has shown that selective reporting of results is a systemic problem afflicting all types of trials, including those with no commercial input [6]. These examples highlight the harmful potential impact of biased reporting on patient care, and the violation of ethical responsibilities of researchers and sponsors to disseminate results accurately and comprehensively.
Biased reporting arises when two main decisions are made based on the direction and statistical significance of the data—whether to publish the trial at all, and if so, which analyses and results to report in the publication. Strong evidence for the selective publication of positive trials has been available for decades [7,8]. More recent cohort studies have focused on the misreporting of trials within publications by comparing journal articles either with documents from regulatory agencies [9–12] or with trial protocols from research ethics committees [13–16], funding agencies [17], research groups [18,19], and journals [20]. These cohort studies identified major discrepancies—favorable results were often highlighted while unfavorable data were suppressed; definitions of primary outcomes were changed; and methods of statistical analysis were modified without explanation in the journal article.
Linked Research Article
This Perspective discusses the following new study published in PLoS Medicine:
Rising K, Bacchetti P, Bero L (2008) Reporting bias in drug trials submitted to the Food and Drug Administration: A review of publication and presentation. PLoS Med 5(11): e217. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.0050217
Lisa Bero and colleagues review the publication status of all efficacy trials carried out in support of new drug approvals from 2001 and 2002, and find that a quarter of trials remain unpublished.
New Evidence
In a new study published in PLoS Medicine, Lisa Bero and colleagues make an important contribution to the growing body of evidence that the randomized trial literature is skewed towards reporting favorable results [9]. The researchers identified trials from 33 new drug applications (NDAs) for new molecular entities approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 2001–2002, and compared information from FDA reviews with journal articles. By including all NDAs from a variety of specialty fields, their findings have broad generalizability to pharmaceutical trials.
Overall, a substantial amount of primary outcome data submitted to the FDA was found to be missing from the literature. One quarter of trials in their sample were unpublished—predominantly those with unfavorable results. Not only were data suppressed for the unpublished trials, but an additional quarter of primary outcomes were omitted from journal articles of published trials. These findings are consistent with two recent reviews of FDA documents and journal articles [10,21], one of which was published in PLoS Medicine in September 2008 [21].
Bero and colleagues also identified important discrepancies between the primary outcomes, statistical analyses, and conclusions presented in NDAs versus those reported in journal articles. The vast majority of discrepancies favored the sponsor's new drug, suggesting biased reporting. While it is possible that the FDA requested modifications to the sponsor's analyses, these amendments should be mentioned in the FDA's statistical review; should not involve altering primary outcomes without explanation in the publication; and would not be expected to favor the sponsor's drug as often as was found in this study.
Biased reporting of results from NDA trials is particularly concerning because these journal articles are the only peer-reviewed source of information on recently approved drugs for health care providers, who will have had limited clinical experience with these new treatments. There are also substantial cost implications if the efficacy is overestimated and the drugs overused, as new molecular entities are among the most expensive pharmaceuticals on the market [22].
The Need for Increased Transparency
Since the interests of patients are of utmost importance, it is difficult to justify why health care providers and policy makers should have access to only a biased subset of information that is substantially different from that which regulatory agencies have at their disposal. Bero and colleagues' study highlights the importance of public access to key documents that have traditionally been deemed confidential—regulatory agency submissions and trial protocols. Both types of documents have unique properties that complement each other.
Regulatory agency submissions represent the final description of how the trial was conducted and analyzed prior to journal publication. However, details from these submissions are not publicly available in most countries. Although summaries of FDA reviews are posted on the FDA Web site, their content and availability is variable, and sections are often redacted [9,21,23]. Furthermore, regulatory agency submissions are prepared by companies after data analysis and may themselves be subject to biased reporting. Finally, only devices, pharmaceuticals, and biological agents require regulatory approval in the United States and other countries, meaning that trials examining other types of interventions (e.g., surgery, education)—which constitute 20% of published randomized trials [24]—would be excluded from reviews of regulatory agency documents. Pharmaceutical trials conducted post-approval would also be missed.
On the other hand, protocols constitute the most comprehensive description of study design prior to trial inception. Their content therefore cannot be influenced by the study results. However, access to trial protocols is particularly difficult to obtain [25,26]. As with summaries of FDA reviews, their content is also highly variable and often lacks sufficient detail [13–18,20]. The SPIRIT initiative (Standard Protocol Items for Randomized Trials) aims to address these deficiencies by producing evidence-based recommendations for key information to include in a trial protocol [27].
Time for Action
It is clear that the trial literature is biased, facilitated in part by limited oversight and difficulty in accessing detailed trial documents. Ongoing progress in trial registration and results disclosure represents a key initial step towards ensuring public access to basic information on trial methods and results [28–33]. Several journals have also acted by publishing protocols and requiring their submission with manuscripts [34–36].
However, much remains to be done—not only to establish reliable, comprehensive registration and results disclosure processes worldwide, but also to start heeding the calls for increased access to full protocols and regulatory agency submissions [14,23,33,37,38]. As shown by recent examples and studies highlighted above, misreporting of trials can be difficult to detect without access to detailed documents beyond what is currently available on registries and results databases. Only with full transparency can the validity of a randomized trial be judged.
The time has come to tackle the challenge of making key trial documents public. It has taken decades for trial registration and results disclosure to be implemented; hopefully, for the sake of patients, public access to full protocols and regulatory agency submissions will come much sooner.
Zdroje
1. McHenryLBJureidiniJN
2008
Industry-sponsored ghostwriting in clinical trial reporting: A case study.
Account Res
15
152
167
2. JureidiniJNMcHenryLBMansfieldPR
2008
Clinical trials and drug promotion: Selective reporting of study 329.
Int J Risk Safety Med
20
73
81
3. PsatyBMKronmalRA
2008
Reporting mortality findings in trials of rofecoxib for Alzheimer disease or cognitive impairment: A case study based on documents from rofecoxib litigation.
JAMA
299
1813
1817
4. CurfmanGDMorrisseySDrazenJM
2006
Expression of concern reaffirmed.
N Engl J Med
354
1193
5. WhittingtonCJKendallTFonagyPCottrellDCotgroveA
2004
Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors in childhood depression: Systematic review of published versus unpublished data.
Lancet
363
1341
1345
6. DwanKAltmanDGArnaizJABloomJChanA-W
2008
Systematic review of the empirical evidence of study publication bias and outcome reporting bias.
PLoS ONE
3
e3081
doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0003081
7. SongFEastwoodAJGilbodySDuleyLSuttonAJ
2000
Publication and related biases.
Health Technol Assess
4
1
115
8. DickersinK
1997
How important is publication bias? A synthesis of available data.
AIDS Educ Prev
9
15
21
9. RisingKBacchettiPBeroL
2008
Reporting bias in drug trials submitted to the Food and Drug Administration: A review of publication and presentation.
PLoS Med
5
e217
doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.0050217
10. TurnerEHMatthewsAMLinardatosETellRARosenthalR
2008
Selective publication of antidepressant trials and its influence on apparent efficacy.
N Engl J Med
358
252
260
11. MelanderHAhlqvist-RastadJMeijerGBeermannB
2003
Evidence b(i)ased medicine—Selective reporting from studies sponsored by pharmaceutical industry: Review of studies in new drug applications.
BMJ
326
1171
1173
12. HemminkiE
1980
Study of information submitted by drug companies to licensing authorities.
BMJ
280
833
836
13. ChanA-WHróbjartssonAJørgensenKJGøtzschePCAltmanDG
2008
Discrepancies in sample size calculations and data analyses reported in randomized trials: Comparison of publications with protocols.
BMJ
In press
14. ChanA-WHróbjartssonAHaahrMTGøtzschePCAltmanDG
2004
Empirical evidence for selective reporting of outcomes in randomized trials: Comparison of protocols to published articles.
JAMA
291
2457
2465
15. HahnSWilliamsonPRHuttonJL
2002
Investigation of within-study selective reporting in clinical research: Follow-up of applications submitted to a local research ethics committee.
J Eval Clin Pract
8
353
359
16. PildalJChanA-WHróbjartssonAForfangEAltmanDG
2005
Does unclear allocation concealment in trial publications reflect poor methods or poor reporting of adequate methods? Cohort study of trial protocols and corresponding published reports.
BMJ
330
1049
1052
17. ChanA-WKrleža-JericKSchmidIAltmanDG
2004
Outcome reporting bias in randomized trials funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research.
CMAJ
171
735
740
18. ScharfOColevasAD
2006
Adverse event reporting in publications compared with sponsor database for cancer clinical trials.
J Clin Oncol
24
3933
3938
19. SoaresHPDanielsSKumarAClarkeMScottC
2004
Bad reporting does not mean bad methods for randomised trials: Observational study of randomised controlled trials performed by the Radiation Therapy Oncology Group.
BMJ
328
22
24
20. Al-MarzoukiSRobertsIEvansSMarshallT
2008
Selective reporting in clinical trials: Analysis of trial protocols accepted by The Lancet.
Lancet
372
201
21. LeeKBacchettiPSimI
2008
Publication of clinical trials supporting successful new drug applications: A literature analysis.
PLoS Med
5
e191
doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.0050191
22. MorganSGBassettKLWrightJMEvansRGBarerML
2005
“Breakthrough” drugs and growth in expenditure on prescription drugs in Canada.
BMJ
331
815
816
23. TurnerEH
2004
A taxpayer-funded clinical trials registry and results database.
PLoS Med
1
e60
doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.0010060
24. ChanA-WAltmanDG
2005
Epidemiology and reporting of randomised trials published in PubMed journals.
Lancet
365
1159
1162
25. ChanA-WUpshurRSinghJAGhersiDChapuisF
2006
Research protocols: Waiving confidentiality for the greater good.
BMJ
332
1086
1089
26. LuriePZieveA
2008
Sometimes the silence can be like the thunder: Access to pharmaceutical data at the FDA.
Law Contemporary Problems
69
85
97
27. ChanA-WTetzlaffJAltmanDGGøtzschePCHróbjartssonA
2008
The SPIRIT initiative: Defining Standard Protocol Items for Randomized Trials [conference abstract].
German J Evid Quality Health Care (suppl)
102
S27
28. World Health Organization
2008
International Clinical Trials Registry Platform.
Available: http://www.who.int/ictrp/en/. Accessed 20 October 2008
29. The PLoS Medicine Editors
2008
Next stop, don't block the doors: Opening up access to clinical trials results.
PLoS Med
5
e160
doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.0050160
30. United States Congress
2007
Food and Drug Administration Amendments Act of 2007, Title VIII, Section 801. Expanded clinical trial registry data bank.
Available: http://www.govtrack.us/congress/billtext.xpd?bill=h110-3580. Accessed 20 October 2008
31. SimIChanA-WGulmezogluAMEvansTPangT
2006
Clinical trial registration: Transparency is the watchword.
Lancet
367
1631
1633
32. DeAngelisCDDrazenJMFrizelleFAHaugCHoeyJ
2005
Is this clinical trial fully registered?: A statement from the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors.
JAMA
293
2927
2929
33. Krleža-JericKChanA-WDickersinKSimIGrimshawJ
2005
Principles for international registration of protocol information and results from human trials of health related interventions: Ottawa statement (part 1).
BMJ
330
956
958
34. PLoS Medicine
2008
Guidelines for authors.
Available: http://journals.plos.org/plosmedicine/guidelines.php#supporting. Accessed 20 October 2008
35. McNameeDJamesAKleinertS
2008
Protocol review at The Lancet.
Lancet
372
189
190
36. JonesGAbbasiK
2004
Trial protocols at the BMJ.
BMJ
329
1360
37. LassereMJohnsonK
2002
The power of the protocol.
Lancet
360
1620
1622
38. HawkeyCJ
2001
Journals should see original protocols for clinical trials.
BMJ
323
1309
39. MitkaM
2008
Controversies surround heart drug study: Questions about Vytorin and trial sponsors' conduct.
JAMA
299
885
887
Štítky
Interní lékařstvíČlánek vyšel v časopise
PLOS Medicine
2008 Číslo 11
- Příznivý vliv Armolipidu Plus na hladinu cholesterolu a zánětlivé parametry u pacientů s chronickým subklinickým zánětem
- Léčba bolesti u seniorů
- Co lze v terapii hypertenze očekávat od přidání perindoprilu k bisoprololu?
- Nefarmakologická léčba dyslipidémií
- Flexofytol® – přírodní revoluce v boji proti osteoartróze kloubů
Nejčtenější v tomto čísle
- Multiple Masses on the Tongue of a Patient with Generalized Mucocutaneous Lesions
- Informed Consent and Shared Decision-Making: A Requirement to Disclose to Patients Off-Label Prescriptions
- Estimating the Global Burden of Snakebite Can Help To Improve Management
- Reporting Bias in Drug Trials Submitted to the Food and Drug Administration: Review of Publication and Presentation