Title: Are We Living in an Evidence Biased World
1Are We Living in an Evidence B(i)ased World?
- Joel Lexchin MD
- School of Health Policy and Management
- York University
- Department of Emergency Medicine
- University Health Network
2My Disclosure
- 1995 I had a piece of
- stale pizza at a drug
- company lunch
3Outline
- Funding of medical research
- Biases in clinical research
- Direction of research
- Sharing of information
- Outcome of clinical research
- Biases in medical journals
- Biases in guidelines
- Biases in CME
4Funding of Medical Research
5Funding for Clinical Research, United States, 2002
Billions
CenterWatch 2003
6How Close is the Relationship?
- 50,000 U.S. clinical investigators received
funding for one or more trial in 2002 - 1.5 billion from industry to academia annually
- 25 of academic investigators receive industry
money 1/3 have personal financial ties with
industry - AMA, Council on Scientific Affairs, 2004
7Health RD in Canada, 2004
Spending in millions of dollars, total 5.75
billion
Statistics Canada. Science Statistics. Catalogue
88-001-XIE
8Clinical RD in Canada, 2004
9Decline of Support for Non-Commercial Trials, UK
Chalmers et al. BMJ 2003 3271017-20
10Biases in Medical Research
11Source of Support and Choice of Research Topic
Blumenthal et al. Science 19862321361-6 Blumenth
al et al. NEJM 19963351734-9
12Drug Companies Directing Research Female Sexual
Dysfunction
Moynihan. BMJ 200332645-7
13Drug Companies Directing Research OA of the Knee
Tallon et al. Lancet 20003552037-40
14Drug Companies Directing Research OA of the Knee
- Rheumatologist Focus Group
- NSAIDs over-researched especially through
commercial sponsored drug trials - Patient Focus Group
- Favoured conservative treatments such as
physiotherapy - More research on education and self-help
- GP Focus Group
- Research on surgical success rates and
conservative treatments - Oral drugs over-researched
- Physiotherapist Focus Group
- Absence of research on physiotherapy exercise
- Dominance of drug trials
15Sharing of Information
16Keeping Research Results Confidential
Out of 181 firms 58 reported company
typically required academic investigators to
keep information confidential for gt6 months in
order to file patent application NIH guideline
30-60 days reasonable period to delay
Blumenthal et al. NEJM 1996334 368-73
17Sharing of Research Results
- Faculty with industrial support
- 11.1 refused to share research results or
biomaterials - Faculty without industrial support
- 5.8 refused to share research results or
biomaterials - Blumenthal et al. NEJM 19963351734-9
18Outcome of Industry Funded Research
19Outcome of Industry Funded Research -I
- Meta-analysis
- studies done over 2
- decades
- wide range of
- disease states, drugs and
- drug classes
- pharmacoeconomic
- studies, clinical trials,
- meta-analyses
Lexchin et al. BMJ 2003326 1167-70
20Outcome of Industry Funded Research - II
- 370 drug trials from 25 Cochrane reviews
- Trials funded by for-profit organizations
significantly more likely to recommend
experimental drug as treatment of choice compared
to trials funded by nonprofit organizations OR
5.3 (95 CI 2.0, 14.4) (After adjusting for
treatment effect and double blinding) - Als-Nielsen et al. JAMA 2003290921-8
21Outcome of Industry Funded Research - III
- Moncrieff. Br J Psych 2003163161-6
- Industry funded clinical trials on clozapine
showed greater positive effect than trials with
other sources of funding - Baker et al. Br J Psych 2003183498-506
- Pharmacoeconomic studies of antidepressants
revealed clear associations of study sponsorship
with quantitative outcome - Bhandari et al. CMAJ 2004170477-80
- 158 RCTs of drug products from 5 high-impact
general medical journals - Industry trials more likely to be favourable to
product OR 1.6 (95 CI 1.1, 2.8) - Procyshyn et al. Can J Psych 200449601-606
- 372 clinical trials on 3 atypical antipsychotics
124 industry sponsored - No industry sponsored trial reported negative
results (findings favouring comparator serious
concerns about safety or efficacy recommended
comparator)
22Possible Explanations
- Use of inappropriate comparators or wrong doses
of comparators (e.g., COMET study) - Non-publication of trials with negative results
- Misinterpretation of results due to financial
conflicts-of-interest - Violations of uncertainty principle (sponsoring
trials likely to produce positive results) - Discontinuing trials likely to produce negative
results - Emphasis on secondary outcomes or subgroup
analyses or using per-protocol analysis - Run-in bias
- Only partial publication of results (e.g., CLASS
study)
23Acceptability of Restrictions in Clinical Trial
Agreements - 107 US Medical Schools
Mello et al. NEJM 20053522202-10
24Whats It Like in the Community Setting?
Corporate funding for clinical research is
increasingly moving into the community S
teinbrook. NEJM 20053522160- 2
25Biases in Medical Journals
26Publication of Research Results
- Suppression of publication
- Biases in published work
27Suppression of Publication
- Have you personally conducted any research
- at your university the results of which are the
- property of the sponsor and cannot be
- published without their consent?
- Faculty with university-industry relationships
24 - Faculty without university-industry
relationships 5 - Blumenthal et al. Science 19862321361-6
28One Possible Reason for Nonpublication
- Trade secrets
- 14.5 of faculty with industrial support produced
research - 4.7 of faculty without industrial support
- Blumenthal et al. NEJM 19963351734-9
29Delaying Publication
- Publication delayed for gt 6 months
- Faculty with academic-industry research
relationships 27 - Faculty without academic-industry research
relationships 17 - Blumenthal et al. JAMA 19972771224-8
30Delaying Publication Publication Source
- Industry-funded research takes longer to be
published than research with other sources of
sponsorship - Industry-funded research more likely to be
published in symposium proceedings - Lexchin et al. BMJ 2003 3261167-70
31Prepublication Review
- One-third of faculty who received gifts
- (biomaterials, research equipment,
- payment for trips to meetings, support for
- students, other research-related items)
- thought donors expected prepublication
- review of articles
- Unknown if donor actually did expect
prepublication review - Campbell et al. JAMA 1998279995-9
32FINANCIAL RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN AUTHORS AND
COMPANIES
- Conclusions of authors
- about value of calcium
- channel blockers as a
- function of financial
- relationship with
- company making
- product (p value for trend
- lt0.001)
Stelfox NEJM 1998338101-6
33Declaration of Conflict of Interest
Higher the score, the more strongly the
treatment is recommended
Kjaergard et al. BMJ 2002 325249
34Declaration of Conflict of Interest
Friedman, JGIM 20041951-6
35Publication Bias in Industry Funded Trials
- Publication of trials submitted to Swedish
- regulatory authorities
- Studies showing significant differences between
efficacy of drug and placebo 3 x more likely to
appear as stand alone publications - Authors names frequently different despite same
data being published - Intention to treat and per protocol analyses used
in submissions to regulatory authorities but only
24 of stand alone journal publications used
intention to treat analysis - High frequency of duplicate publication due to
inclusion of different subsets of studies in
several pooled publications - Melander et al. BMJ 20033261171-3
36Conclusions Not Supported by Data
- Manufacturer supported trials of NSAIDs in
arthritis - Several studies reporting superior efficacy used
multiple outcomes without correction of threshold
value for statistical significance - In 10 of 22 studies concluding that
manufacturer-associated drug was less toxic no
supporting statistical test - Rochon et al. Archives of Internal Medicine
1994154157-63
37Ghostwriting - Articles on Paroxetine
Healy et al. British Journal of Psychiatry
200318322-7
38Biases in Clinical Practice Guidelines
39Conflicts of Interest in Clinical Practice
Guidelines
Over 200 guidelines examined only 90 contained
details about individual conflicts of interest
of those only 31 free of industry influence
Nature 20054371070-1
40Biases in CME
41Income and Expenses, CME in US, 1998-2003
42CME Funding, U.S. 2003
25th percentile
50th percentile
75th percentile
Total schools
43Analysis of CME Funded by Academia and Industry,
2000-01
Katz et al. J Contin Ed Hlth Professions
20022243-54
44Effects of CME On Prescribing Patterns
Course 1 Course 2
Bowman. J Cont Educ Hlth Profess 1988813-20
45Conclusions
- Biases mean that evidence only exists for certain
types of therapy - Biases are in favour of commercial interests
- Biases (real or perceived) exist at many levels
- Choices research topic, CME topic
- Outcomes clinical research
- Content journal articles, guidelines, CME
- If unrecognized and unchallenged biases can
result in suboptimal medicine