| Literature DB >> 22448149 |
Erick H Turner1, Daniel Knoepflmacher, Lee Shapley.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Publication bias compromises the validity of evidence-based medicine, yet a growing body of research shows that this problem is widespread. Efficacy data from drug regulatory agencies, e.g., the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), can serve as a benchmark or control against which data in journal articles can be checked. Thus one may determine whether publication bias is present and quantify the extent to which it inflates apparent drug efficacy. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22448149 PMCID: PMC3308934 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001189
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Characteristics of premarketing trials of antipsychotics according to FDA.
| Drug Being Studied | Trial Number or Identifier | Number of Sites (Location) | Diagnoses Included | Treatment Arm | Duration (wks) | Primary Rating Scale | Baseline Score | |||
| Scz | Scz-Aff | Drug Group | Dose (mg) |
| ||||||
|
| 93202 | 10 (US) | + | − | Aripiprazole | 30 | 33 | 4 | BPRSd | 53 |
| Haloperidol | 20 | 33 | 50.3 | |||||||
| Pbo | 0 | 35 | 50 | |||||||
| 94202 | 22 (US) | + | − | Aripiprazole | 10 | 51 | 4 | BPRS core | 17 | |
| 30 | 54 | 16.2 | ||||||||
| Haloperidol | 10 | 54 | 16.6 | |||||||
| Pbo | 0 | 57 | 16.1 | |||||||
| 97201 | 36 (US) | + | + | Aripiprazole | 15 | 99 | 4 | PANSS | 98.8 | |
| 30 | 100 | 99.6 | ||||||||
| Haloperidol | 10 | 99 | 99.9 | |||||||
| Pbo | 0 | 102 | 100.9 | |||||||
| 97202 | 40 (US) | + | + | Aripiprazole | 20 | 98 | 4 | PANSS | 94 | |
| 30 | 96 | 92.3 | ||||||||
| Risperidone | 6 | 95 | 93.6 | |||||||
| Pbo | 0 | 103 | 95 | |||||||
| 138001 | 57 (US, Canada) | + | − | Aripiprazole | 10 | 103 | 6 | PANSS | 92.76 | |
| 15 | 103 | 93.27 | ||||||||
| 20 | 97 | 92.29 | ||||||||
| Pbo | 0 | 107 | 92.4 | |||||||
|
| 3000 | 45 (US) | + | + | Iloperidone | 12 | 115 (82) | 6 | PANSS | 94.6 |
| Haloperidol | 15 | 115 (70) | 96.1 | |||||||
| Pbo | 0 | 117 (78) | 95 | |||||||
| 3004 | 65 (No Am, So Afr, Eur, Australia) | + | + | Iloperidone | 10–16 | 149 (121) | 6 | BPRSd | 54.1 | |
| Risperidone | 4–8 | 146 (110) | 54.7 | |||||||
| Pbo | 0 | 152 (116) | 54.2 | |||||||
| 3005 | 67 (No Am, So Afr, Isr, Eur) | + | + | Iloperidone | 12–16 | 230 (178) | 6 | BPRSd | 54.4 | |
| 20–24 | 141 (111) | 54.9 | ||||||||
| Risperidone | 6–8 | 148 (119) | 55 | |||||||
| Pbo | 0 | 152 (113) | 55.4 | |||||||
| 3101 | 44 (US, India) | + | − | Iloperidone | 24 | 283 | 4 | PANSS | 92.88 | |
| Ziprasidone | 160 | 144 | 90.95 | |||||||
| Pbo | 0 | 140 | 90.48 | |||||||
|
| HGAD | 23 (US, Canada) | + | − | Olanzapine | 10 | 62 | 6 | BPRS | 42.84 |
| 15 | 65 | 42.62 | ||||||||
| Haloperidol | 15 | 68 | 41.79 | |||||||
| Pbo | 0 | 62 | 39.69 | |||||||
| HGAP | 12 (US) | + | − | Olanzapine | 10 | 49 | 6 | BPRS | 37.43 | |
| Pbo | 0 | 49 | 36.78 | |||||||
|
| 303 | 53 (Eastern and Western Eur) | + | − | Paliperidone | 6 | 123 | 6 | PANSS | 94.3 |
| 9 | 122 | 93.2 | ||||||||
| 12 | 129 | 94.6 | ||||||||
| Pbo | 0 | 126 | 94.1 | |||||||
| 304 | 45 (US) | + | − | Paliperidone | 6 | 110 | 6 | PANSS | 92.3 | |
| 12 | 111 | 94.1 | ||||||||
| Olanzapine | 10 | 105 | — | |||||||
| Pbo | 0 | 105 | 93.6 | |||||||
| 305 | 74 (No Am, Eastern Eur, Asia, Isr, Mex, So Afr) | + | − | Paliperidone | 3 | 123 | 6 | PANSS | 91.6 | |
| 9 | 123 | 93.9 | ||||||||
| 15 | 113 | 92.4 | ||||||||
| Olanzapine | 10 | — | — | |||||||
| Pbo | 0 | 120 | 93.9 | |||||||
|
| 0001/0008 | 37 (US, Eur) | + | − | Quetiapine | ≤250 | 92 | 6 | BPRS | 38.89 |
| ≤750 | 94 | 41.04 | ||||||||
| Pbo | 0 | 94 | 38.35 | |||||||
| 0006 | 11 (US) | + | − | Quetiapine | 75–750 | 53 | 6 | BPRS | 55.79 | |
| Pbo | 0 | 53 | 54.09 | |||||||
| 0013 | 26 (US, Canada) | + | − | Quetiapine | 150 | 48 | 6 | BPRS | 47.15 | |
| 300 | 51 | 45.29 | ||||||||
| 600 | 51 | 43.45 | ||||||||
| 750 | 53 | 45.72 | ||||||||
| Haloperidol | 12 | 50 | 44 | |||||||
| Pbo | 0 | 51 | 45.31 | |||||||
|
| 201 | 9 (US) | + | − | Risperidone | 1–10 | 51 | 6 | BPRS | 56.2 |
| Haloperidol | 20 | 52 | 53.1 | |||||||
| Pbo | 0 | 53 | 52.8 | |||||||
| 204 | 28 (US, Canada) | + | − | Risperidone | 6 | 85 | 8 | PANSS | 94.9 | |
| 10 | 85 | 91.8 | ||||||||
| 16 | 85 | 93.9 | ||||||||
| Haloperidol | 20 | 85 | 93.6 | |||||||
| Pbo | 0 | 86 | 92.6 | |||||||
|
| RIS-USA-121 | 47 (US) | + | − | Risperidone LAI | 25 | 93 | 12 | PANSS | 81.7 |
| 50 | 98 | 82.3 | ||||||||
| Pbo | 0 | 92 | 82 | |||||||
|
| 104 | 17 (US) | + | + | Ziprasidone | 40 | 55 | 4 | BPRS | 34.5 |
| 80 | 47 | 36.2 | ||||||||
| Pbo | 0 | 47 | 33.4 | |||||||
| 106 | 12 (US) | + | + | Ziprasidone | 40 | 43 | 4 | BPRS | 36.5 | |
| 120 | 41 | 36.6 | ||||||||
| Pbo | 0 | 47 | 37 | |||||||
| 114 | 34 (US, Canada) | + | + | Ziprasidone | 80 | 104 | 6 | BPRSd | 56.5 | |
| 160 | 103 | 55 | ||||||||
| Pbo | 0 | 91 | 55.1 | |||||||
| 115 | 54 (US) | + | + | Ziprasidone | 40 | 86 | 6 | BPRSd | 53.8 | |
| 120 | 76 | 51.8 | ||||||||
| 200 | 82 | 51.8 | ||||||||
| Haloperidol | 15 | 82 | 53.9 | |||||||
| Pbo | 0 | 80 | 54.3 | |||||||
Drug brand name shown in parentheses. A dash indicates that the baseline score is not available in the FDA review. For aripiprazole Trial 94202, the number of sites is based on FDA analysis, which excluded site #003 (see text). For the first three iloperidone trials, parentheses enclose the sample size of the subset of patients with schizophrenia analyzed by the FDA. Dose groups shown only if within FDA-approved dose range. For paliperidone Trials 304 and 305, the FDA review did not list results for the olanzapine group: the corresponding n was taken from the corresponding journal article.
BPRSd, BPRS score derived from PANSS score; Eur, Europe; Isr, Israel; Mex, Mexico; No Am, North America; Pbo, placebo; So Afr, South Africa; Scz, schizophrenia; Scz-Aff, schizoaffective disorder.
Bibliographic information on FDA-registered antipsychotic trials.
| Sponsor | Drug Name | Trial Number or Identifier | First Author | Year | Journal Name | PubMed ID | Reference |
|
| Quetiapine | 0006 | Borison | 1996 | J Clin Psychopharmacol | 8690831 |
|
| 0001/0008 | Small | 1997 | Arch Gen Psychiatry | 9193196 |
| ||
| 0013 | Arvanitis | 1997 | Biol Psychiatry | 9270900 |
| ||
|
| Aripiprazole | 93202 |
| ||||
| 94202 |
| ||||||
| 97201 | Kane | 2002 | J Clin Psychiatry | 12363115 |
| ||
| 97202 | Potkin | 2003 | Arch Gen Psychiatry | 12860772 |
| ||
| 138001 | McEvoy | 2007 | J Psychiatr Res | 17631314 |
| ||
|
| Paliperidone | 303 | Kane | 2007 | Schizophr Res | 17092691 |
|
| 304 | Marder | 2007 | Biol Psychiatry | 17601495 |
| ||
| 305 | Davidson | 2007 | Schizophr Res | 17466492 |
| ||
| Risperidone | 201 | Borison | 1992 | Psychopharmacol Bull | 13811002 |
| |
| 204 (US sites) | Marder | 1994 | Am J Psychiatry | 7514366 |
| ||
| 204 (Canadian sites) | Chouinard | 1993 | J Clin Psychopharmacol | 7683702 |
| ||
| Risperidone LAI | RIS-USA-121 | Kane | 2003 | Am J Psychiatry | 12777271 |
| |
|
| Olanzapine | HGAD | Beasley | 1996 | Neuropsychopharmacology | 8822534 |
|
| HGAP | Beasley | 1996 | Psychopharmacology (Berl) | 8935812 |
| ||
|
| Iloperidone | 3000 | Potkin | 2008 | J Clin Psychopharmacol | 18334911 |
|
| 3004 | |||||||
| 3005 | |||||||
| 3101 | Cutler | 2008 | J Clin Psychopharmacol | 18334909 |
| ||
|
| Ziprasidone | 104 |
| ||||
| 106 | Keck | 1998 | Psychopharmacology (Berl) | 9860108 |
| ||
| 114 | Daniel | 1999 | Neuropsychopharmacology | 10192829 |
| ||
| 115 |
|
Figure 1Trial outcome according to the FDA versus publication status of 24 premarketing trials of eight second-generation antipsychotics.
Published trials are shown as white boxes, unpublished trials are shown as black boxes, and the trial numbers are shown within the boxes. Unpublished trials were, with one exception, not positive (either negative or questionable). Please see the text for narrative descriptions of several of these trials. Please note that the number of white boxes does not equal the number of journal articles (see text and Table 2): iloperidone trials 3000, 3004, and 3005 were published in a single journal article, and risperidone trial 204 was published as two separate journal articles, as though the US and Canadian sites constituted two distinct positive trials.
Figure 2Forest plot of effect size (Hedges's g) values for FDA-registered premarketing trials of second-generation antipsychotics.
The black horizontal bars highlight the four unpublished trials, three of which demonstrated no statistically significant advantage for the drug over placebo. The fourth unpublished trial showed that the drug was superior to placebo but statistically inferior to the active comparator haloperidol. Below the first dotted horizontal line, subtotal effect size and confidence interval values are shown for the subset of published trials and for the subset of unpublished trials. The difference in effect size between the published and unpublished trials was statistically significant (see text). Below the second dotted horizontal line, the FDA-based effect size is shown for all trials combined (0.44). The effect sizes shown for iloperidone trials 3000, 3004, and 3005 are based on the full sample of patients recruited, i.e., those with either schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder, as opposed to the subset of patients with schizophrenia only (see text for details).
Figure 3Forest plot of mean weighted effect size (Hedges's g) values by drug and data source.
The figure is sorted according to the effect size point estimates derived from the FDA data; these are shown with gray-filled squares. The point estimates derived from the corresponding journal articles are shown with open circles. Horizontal lines indicate 95% confidence intervals around the effect size point estimates. The right-hand column shows the percent differences between the FDA-based and the journal-based effect size point estimates. (These percent differences are based on estimates accurate to three decimal places, while the estimates shown are rounded to two decimal places.) The differences ranged from −4% to +20%, depending on the drug. For the entire drug class (labeled “overall antipsychotics”), publication bias increased apparent effect size by 8%. To provide context, previously published data on antidepressants [8] are shown at the bottom in gray. Note that the 8% increase with antipsychotics is much less than the 32% increase with antidepressants [8]. Also, the journal data show only a 16% advantage in effect size for antipsychotics over antidepressants (from 0.41 to 0.48), while FDA data reveal a much larger advantage (42%, from 0.31 to 0.44).
Iloperidone results (p-values) by trial, dose group, and diagnosis.
| Trial Number/Measure | Primary Dose Group(s) (mg/d) | Schizophrenia+Schizoaffective Disorder (All Patients) | Schizophrenia Only (Post Hoc FDA Subset) |
| ||
| Superiority versus Placebo | Inferiority versus Active Comparator | Superiority versus Placebo | Inferiority versus Active Comparator | |||
| 3000 | 8+12 | 0.065 |
| 0.148 | 0.063 |
|
| 3004 | 10–16 |
|
| 0.306 |
|
|
| 3005 | 12–16 | 0.059 |
|
|
| 0.09 |
| 20–24 | 0.071 |
|
| 0.093 |
| |
| 3101 | 24 | Schizoaffective patients not recruited |
| FDA reported as statistically inferior without |
| |
| Total number of positive trials | 1 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 4 | |
| Total number negative or questionable trials | 2 | 3 | 2 | 2 | 0 | |
| Meets FDA approval criterion of two or more positive trials | No | — | Yes | — | — | |
Statistically significant p-values (<0.05) are given in bold. Column at far right shows p-values from journal articles; all others are from the FDA review of iloperidone. See text for details.