Healthy Skepticism Library item: 3585
Warning: This library includes all items relevant to health product marketing that we are aware of regardless of quality. Often we do not agree with all or part of the contents.
 
Publication type: news
Larger companies still withholding trials info, says study
PM Live.com 2006 Jan 3
http://www.pmlive.com/pharm_market/news.cfm?showArticle=1&ArticleID=4296
Notes:
Ralph Faggotter’s Commments:
Menmbers of the general public might naiively imagine that the world of research is all about openness, clarity of purpose, free exchange of information, the search for the truth, a desire to improve the human condition etc etc.
Sadly, much of the time, none of the above are true.
Full text:
Larger companies still withholding trials info, says study
The New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) has fired a broadside on the pharma industry, alleging that several major companies are withholding important details about clinical drug trials in published studies.
In this week’s edition of the US journal, a study by researchers at the National Library of Medicine, which runs a federal clinical trials registry, said companies including Merck, Pfizer and GlaxoSmithKline, are obscuring basic information on trials of drugs to treat serious diseases.
The registry, www.clinicaltrials.gov, was created in 2000 to beef up US Food and Drug Administration monitoring but did not get wide participation until September 2004, when editors of leading medical journals said they would refuse to publish results of any studies that were not first listed in a public registry.
In an accompanying editorial, NEJM editor in chief Dr Jeffrey Drazen called for investigators and patients to avoid participating in drug trials where companies are not forthcoming with information.
“When patients put themselves at risk to participate in clinical trials, they do so with tacit understanding that their risk is part of the public record, not merely the secret record of the sponsor,” he wrote.
While the study said most drug companies had made progress to make public more information about their trials, it said several large companies are providing information that is incomplete or vague and in some cases are not even disclosing the names of the drugs they are studying, using terms such as “investigational drug” to describe them.
The study also found that some companies provided scant information about what results their clinical trials are measuring. For example, Novartis reported details about outcomes it was measuring in reports on only eight of 239 trials, while Merck reported outcome details in only nine of 46 trials.
In a statement, Merck said it was reluctant to provide details on outcome data in early stage research trials because such information is “highly proprietary”.
Several of the larger companies said they were meeting all federal requirements for disclosing of clinical trial data, but were wary of giving out too much information because of competitive concerns.
However, Dr Drazen described the companies’ concerns as “a smoke screen” and said that other drug makers managed to provide full and detailed information on their trials.
He also said that by not requiring companies to name drugs being tested, the federal requirements had a loophole: “Companies are meeting the letter but not the spirit of the law.”
Date published: 03/01/2006