Guest guest Posted December 31, 2005 Report Share Posted December 31, 2005 Boycott of secretive drug trials sought By ED SUSMAN BOSTON, Dec. 30 (UPI) -- The editor of the prestigious New England Journal of Medicine called on doctors who engage in clinical trials to boycott studies sponsored by pharmaceutical companies that do not fully live up to the spirit of legal requirements to register such research efforts. In a study that appears in this week's Journal, researchers from the National Institutes of Health indicate that many of the registered trials fail to give critical information -- sometimes not even including the name of the drug being studied. For Dr. Drazen, editor of the Boston-based Journal, arguably the premier medical publication in the world, that type of corporate evasion is unacceptable. In a strongly worded editorial Drazen wrote: " In our opinion, it is unacceptable for a trial sponsor not to register its trial in a complete, meaningful and timely fashion. We call for all clinical investigators and patients to participate only in fully registered trials. " This call has recently been echoed by the major organization representing academic medical centers in the United States -- the Association of American Medical Colleges. " If a company continues to register trials using meaningless data, with no respect for the registration process and the patients who participate in those trials, investigators and patients should refuse to participate. " If a company realizes that secrecy and failure to register mean that it cannot meet its recruitment goals, it will quickly recognize that the consequence of that secrecy is commercial failure, not competitive success. We must monitor the companies that are currently noncompliant to ensure that all live up to the spirit of the law as reflected in meaningful clinical trial registration. " Dr. Deborah Zarin, director of ClinicalTrials.gov, the national database that registers ongoing drug studies, told United Press International that there appears to be an improvement among the drug companies in providing key information since May 2005. In her article, for example, she noted that Lilly did not have a specific name in the field for " intervention name " -- the drug being tested -- in 3 of 96 records through May 20. Since that time all 40 of the new studies registered by Lilly have had the name included. GlaxoKline did not report the name of the drug being studied in 53 of 104 trials, through corrected six of those. " Since May, GlaxoKline has registered 128 new trials, " Zarin said, " and all but one of those includes the name of the drug being studied. " Another key data point in the registry involves naming the " primary outcome measure " -- in other words, exactly what the trial is going to try to determine. " I think it would be somewhat difficult to understand a study if we do not know what the primary outcome measure it, " Zarin said. Novartis has registered 239 trials between May 2005 and Oct. 11, 2005, but the nation's No. 6 drug company according to sales listed the primary outcome measure in just eight of those trials. In contrast, Pfizer, the nation's leading pharmaceutical company in sales, listed the primary outcome measure in 99 percent of registered trials -- 221 out of 224 in the same time frame. However, Zarin noted that Pfizer still was negligent as far as including the name of the drug being studied was concerned. Before May 2005 the drug name was not specifically mentioned in 22 of 75 registered trials; between May and October 2005 Pfizer did not give a specific name for the drug in 14 of those 224 trials. Merck, the No. 4 company, had 120 of 132 trials that did not include the specific drug name through May 2005. However, Zarin said that the company corrected the records in all but one trial. In the interim between May and October all 52 of the new Merck registered trials included the specific drug name. But only 20 percent of those new Merck trials had a primary outcome described. While the companies are legally required to register the trials, the wording of the legislation allows the data to be obscured. " Based on the law as it now stands, I could not say that any of the companies have broken any laws with their registration filings, " Zarin told UPI Friday. ClinicalTrials.gov is part of the National Library of Medicine, which in turn is a branch of the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Md. The Food and Drug Modernization Act, section 113 mandates the registration of all public and private trials that test effectiveness for " serious or life-threatening " conditions submitted to the FDA under investigational new-drug applications. Zarin said that her article describing the statistics gathered by ClinicalTrials.gov should not be viewed as a report card or as a call for changes in the existing statues. " It's just our report, " she said, inviting others to interpret it. Drazen of the New England Journal of Medicine, however, did look at Zarin's study as a report card and suggested that for some companies the report would read " improved but could do better. " He said that since many other drug companies were in full compliance, it would undercut arguments that being transparent could not be accomplished in a competitive world. " We demand complete compliance, because trial registration makes moral sense, " Drazen said. " When patients put themselves at risk to participate in clinical trials, they do so with the tacit understanding that their risk is part of the public record, not merely the secret record of the sponsor. " Copyright 2005 by United Press International. . 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