| Literature DB >> 27158530 |
Adam G Dunn1, Enrico Coiera1, Kenneth D Mandl2, Florence T Bourgeois3.
Abstract
Conflicts of interest held by researchers remain a focus of attention in clinical research. Biases related to these relationships have the potential to directly impact the quality of healthcare by influencing decision-making, yet conflicts of interest remain under-reported, inconsistently described, and difficult to access. Initiatives aimed at improving the disclosure of researcher conflicts of interest are still in their infancy but represent a vital reform that must be addressed before potential biases associated with conflicts of interest can be mitigated, and trust in the impartiality of clinical evidence restored. In this review, we examine the prevalence of conflicts of interest, evidence of the effects that disclosed and undisclosed conflicts of interest have had on the reporting of clinical evidence, and the emerging approaches for improving the completeness and consistency of disclosures. Through this review of emerging technologies, we recognize a growing interest in publicly-accessible registries for researcher conflicts of interest, and propose five desiderata aimed at maximizing the value of such registries: mandates for ensuring that researchers keep their records up to date; transparent records that are made available to the public; interoperability to allow researchers, bibliographic databases, and institutions to interact with the registry; a consistent taxonomy for describing different classes of conflicts of interest, and the ability to automatically generate conflicts of interest statements for use in published articles.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27158530 PMCID: PMC4854425 DOI: 10.1186/s41073-016-0006-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Res Integr Peer Rev ISSN: 2058-8615
Examples of the impact of undisclosed conflicts of interest on clinical evidence, public opinion, and clinical decision-making
| Interventions | The potential impact of undisclosed conflicts of interest |
|---|---|
| Rosiglitazone | Following a meta-analysis showing an association between rosiglitazone and cardiovascular risk, articles authored by researchers with conflicts of interest were more likely to uphold the safety of the drug [ |
| Alteplase | Alteplase was strongly recommended for use in acute stroke in clinical guidelines despite resistance from emergency physicians concerned about intracerebral hemorrhage [ |
| Risperidone | While failing to completely disclose financial relationships with the manufacturer of risperidone, an influential researcher was instrumental in expanding the diagnosis criteria for bipolar disorder in children and conducted a number of pediatric clinical trials demonstrating the benefit of the drug in children [ |
| Calcium-channel antagonists | A survey study found that authors’ published positions on the safety of calcium channel antagonists were more likely to be favorable to the drug class if they responded that they had a financial conflict of interest (63 % of authors reported a financial conflict of interest in the survey) [ |
| Measles, mumps, rubella (MMR) vaccine | A study linking the MMR vaccine to autism was eventually retracted after it was discovered that an author failed to disclose how he stood to gain financially by discrediting the vaccine [ |
| Neuraminidase inhibitors | Academics who were interviewed in newspaper articles covering the 2009 H1N1 pandemic were more likely to overestimate the risk of the pandemic or promote the use of neuraminidase inhibitors if they had conflicts of interest [ |
Five key features of a global public registry for researcher conflicts of interest
| Key feature | Description |
|---|---|
| Enforceability | Mandates from publishers, funding bodies, and institutions to require up-to-date details in the registry prior to publication, funding, or as a condition of employment |
| Transparency | A transparent, archived record of changes, including information on the timing and authorship of entry modifications |
| Interoperability | The ability for institutions, companies, and other organizations to push changes into the registry and automatically update researcher records |
| Taxonomy | A consistent taxonomy for describing financial and non-financial conflicts of interest |
| Automated disclosures | The ability to automatically generate statements about relevant disclosures for inclusion in abstracts and published articles according to templates specified by individual journals |