
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL
OF PHARMACEUTICAL MEDICINE
February, 2002, Vol.16, issue 6, Page 9 OPINION ·························································································································· How to increase trust in reporting pharmaceutical research findings Mark Goodman [1]
and Brian Hess [2] The recent debacle concerning allegations of intentionally withholding
damaging longitudinal outcomes data by investigators supported with funds
from the manufacturer of Celebrex [1-3] once again raises the issue of
a temptation to compromise ethics in research. Researchers and authors
supported by pharmaceutical manufacturers are in an unenviable position
due to pressures from their ‘dual relationship’, wherein they
are simultaneously functioning in two conflicting roles – to serve
as doctoral level scientists, and to recognize and report findings satisfactory
to the parent drug maker on whom the scientist may be dependent for current
and future remuneration. Medical journals generating revenue from drug
advertisements and the journal editors themselves also experience this
dependent, symbiotic, dual relationship. ‘The journals are the major
force for quality control in scientific work’ [4] and, coincidentally,
the journals become the easiest point in the system to implement fail-safe
mechanisms rapidly, in order to increase further the integrity of the
manuscript’s findings. (1) Within each medical journal’s editorial staff there should
be a doctoral level biostatistician, without corporate funding affiliation,
who will be supplied with the submitted manuscript’s summary, methods
and results sections. The staff biostatistician must possess the methodlogical
acumen to reconcile research design abnormalities that may skew reported
results. The proposed extra step performed by the journal’s biostatistician
on raw data, previously formatted, coded and entered by the researcher’s
biostatistician, may consume some 60 minutes, but add immeasureable confidence
to editors, reviewers and journals publishing pharmaceutical studies. References: 1. Gottlieb S. Researchers deny any attempt to mislead the public over
JAMA article on arthritis drug. Br Med J 2001;
323;301.
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