| Literature DB >> 32816563 |
Andrew Grey1, Richard Portch1, Alan Gaby2, Hamish Grey1, Mark Bolland1.
Abstract
During evaluation of the integrity of 172 clinical trial publications, we identified 138 unique trial registration documents linked to 157 publications. Eighty-eight (64%) registrations were retrospective. Discrepancies in key trial characteristics - ethics oversight, study timeline, study location, participant number and sample size - between 68 registration documents and their linked publications were reported to journals, publishers and a national regulatory body. Subsequently, revisions to 119/138 registration documents were lodged at the registry website, a median (IQR) of 44 (32-56) months after initial registration. Revisions were made to 56 of the 68 registration documents included in the report: there was a median of 8 (IQR 6-9) changes per document. 79-93% of revised documents contained ≥1 alteration to the primary outcome(s), the secondary outcome(s), and the participant inclusion/exclusion criteria. Changes in each of study location, study timeline, participant age, sample size, and randomization method were made in ≥33% of revised documents. Eight months after journals, publishers and the regulatory body were apprised of the revisions, none of the affected publications has been corrected with an , expression of concern, or retraction. These results call into question whether regulators and publishers regard trial registration documents as helpful in ensuring publication integrity.Entities:
Keywords: Research integrity; clinical trials; publishing ethics; trial registration
Year: 2020 PMID: 32816563 DOI: 10.1080/08989621.2020.1813580
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Account Res ISSN: 0898-9621 Impact factor: 2.622