The prevalence and influence of self-reported conflicts of interest by editorial authors of phase III cancer trials

Data
2012-09-01Autor(a)
Lerner, Tatiana Goberstein
Miranda, Michele da Costa
Lera, Andrea Thaumaturgo
Ueda, Aline [UNIFESP]
Briones, Bruna
Del Giglio, Auro
Riechelmann, Rachel
Tipo
ArtigoISSN
1551-7144É parte de
Contemporary Clinical TrialsDOI
10.1016/j.cct.2012.05.011Metadado
Mostrar registro completoResumo
Purpose: To assess the frequency with which editorial authors report personal conflict of interest and investigate a possible association between the presence of such conflicts and favorable opinion.Methods: Eligible studies were editorials of phase III clinical trials of antitumor drugs or symptom management published from January 2007 to December 2009 in four top oncology journals. Data from the editorials were collected and each editorial opinion was classified as favorable, neutral or unfavorable with respect to the experimental therapy.Results: Fifty-four editorials were included: 23 (43%) reported at least one conflict of interest, with the most frequent one being consultancy fees. Conclusions of editorial authors were classified as favorable in 18 editorials (33%). Sensitivity analysis found an association between self-reported conflict of interest of the editorial author and editorial favorable opinion (RR:2.7; 95% Cl 1.2-6.1; p = 0.019).Discussion: Besides the high proportion of conflict of interest among editorial authors discussing phase Ill clinical trials, study interpretation may be influenced by their financial relationships with industry. (C) 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Citação
Contemporary Clinical Trials. New York: Elsevier B.V., v. 33, n. 5, p. 1019-1022, 2012.Palavras-chave
Conflict of interestAntineoplastic agents/pharmacology
Clinical trials as topic/ethics
Authorship
Periodicals as topic
Coleções
- EPM - Artigos [17707]