| Literature DB >> 27044283 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) Recommendations set ethical and editorial standards for article publication in most leading medical journals. Here, I examine the strengths and weaknesses of the Recommendations in the prevention of commercial bias in industry-financed journal literature, on three levels - scholarly discourse, article content, and article attribution. DISCUSSION: With respect to overall discourse, the most important measures in the ICMJE Recommendations are for enforcing clinical trial registration and controlling duplicate publication. With respect to article content, the ICMJE promotes stringent author accountability and adherence to established reporting standards. However, the ICMJE accepts the use of commercial editorial teams to produce manuscripts, which is a potential source of bias, and accepts private company ownership and analysis of clinical trial data. New ICMJE guidance on data sharing will address but not eliminate problems of commercial data access. With respect to attribution, the Recommendations oppose guest authorship and encourage clear documentation of author contributions. However, they exclude writers from coauthorship; provide no specific advice on the attribution of commercial literature, for instance with respect to company authorship, author sequence or prominent commercial labeling; and endorse the use of fine print and euphemism. The ICMJE requires detailed author interest disclosures, but overlooks the interests of non-authors and companies, and does not recommend that interests most salient to the publication are highlighted. Together, these weaknesses facilitate "advocacy"-based marketing, in which literature planned, financed and produced by companies is fronted by academics, enabling commercial messages to be presented to customers by their respected clinical peers rather than companies themselves.Entities:
Keywords: Attribution; Authorship; Bias; Conflict of interest; Contributorship; Data sharing; ICMJE; Key opinion leader; Marketing; Pharmaceutical industry; Publication ethics; Publishing industry
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27044283 PMCID: PMC4820950 DOI: 10.1186/s12910-016-0103-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Ethics ISSN: 1472-6939 Impact factor: 2.652
Potential commercial bias in medical journal articles, and ICMJE protection
| Level of bias (References) | Examples | Current ICMJE protection (section of December 2015 |
|---|---|---|
| Academic | • Clinical trials: what studies to undertake, whom to recruit as partners, whether and how to publish. | • Limited options available to ICMJE. |
| Article content [ | • Clinical trials: design, conduct, discontinuation, analysis and interpretation. | • Limited options– heavily reliant on peer review. |
| Article attribution [ | • Spinning the sum effect of authorship, contributorship, acknowledgements, text, labeling, etc. | • Extensive options – but poorly developed. |
Section by section: strengths and weaknesses of the ICMJE Recommendations as a barrier to marketing bias (December 2015 Recommendations)
| Section | Strengths | Weaknesses | |
|---|---|---|---|
| IIA1 | Contributor listings | • Bookkeeping of author accountability. | • Do not separate academic and company coauthors. |
| II A2 | Authorship formula | • Encourages high scientific standards. | • Facilitates byline avoidance. |
| II A3 | Acknowledgements | • Bookkeeping of non-author contributions, accountability. | • Omit key commercial information. |
| II A3 | Writers barred from coauthorship | • None. | • Supports commercial production of ghostwritten manuscripts. |
| II B | Conflict of interest | • Comprehensive net for author financial interests. | • Salient interests not highlighted. |
| II B | Role of funding source | • Company role in conducting research, decision to publish reported. | • No requirement to report company instigation, database ownership or identity of marketed product. |
| II B | Access to data | • Discourages restrictions on author access to data. | • No requirement for independent statistical analysis. |
| IIB | Right to publish | • Authors discouraged from agreeing limitations to their right to publish. | • Should insist on contractual rights guaranteeing publishing rights for academic coauthors. |
| IIID | Overlapping publications | • Reduces discourse bias by identifying / reducing duplicate articles. | • Limited ability to prevent repetition of commercial content. |
| IIIG | Supplements and series | • Editorial control defended. | • None – but should apply to all commercially financed articles. |
| III L | Trial registration | • Helps locate published commercial trials. | • None. |
| IV A2 | Reporting guidelines | • CONSORT compliance required. | • Readers referred to EQUATOR and National Library of Medicine (NLM) listings of guidelines - these include trade guidelines compatible with marketing. |
| IV A3b | Funding source, trial identifier listed in Abstract | • Visibly identifies presence of company in PubMed-searchable format. | • The terms “funding,” “support” and “sponsorship” misrepresent actual instigating/proprietary role of commerce. |
| IV A3d | Role of “contracted organization” described in Methods | • Reveals involvement of company to readers. | • Stipulation is vaguely worded and omits key details e.g. company instigation, database ownership, identity of marketed product. |
Future development of the ICMJE Recommendations: suggested policies with respect to industry
| Theme | Policies for discussion |
|---|---|
| General commercial guidance | • Develop specific section on commercial publications. |
| Data sharing | • Full rights of access to study protocols, clinical study reports, deidentified patient data including clinical record forms. |
| Attribution | • Guidance on balanced attribution, ensuring conspicuity of lead contributors – including companies as corporate entities. |
| Interest disclosures | • Financing company’s interests and author relationships identified in Abstract. |