What You Don't Know About a Drug Can Hurt You

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122903390105599607.html


Untold Numbers of Clinical-Trial Results Go Unpublished; Those That 
Are Made Public Can't Always Be Believed




By ROBERT LEE HOTZ

There's a common assumption that when a drug makes it to market, it 
has run a rigorous gantlet of testing and proper disclosure. Testing, 
yes. Disclosure -- not necessarily.

Findings from many clinical studies assessing prescription drugs 
never see light of day. That skews the basic scientific record that 
every patient, physician and researcher needs to judge whether 
treatments cause more harm than good. There is no easy way to 
discover how much knowledge we've been missing, raising the 
possibility that we may be taking medications that are less effective 
than we've been led to believe or may have undisclosed side effects.


Forum

<http://community.wsj.com/community/groups/science-journal-242/topics/do-you-trust-prescription-drugs>Discuss:
 
Do you trust prescription drugs? Do you think pharmaceutical research 
is over-regulated or under-regulated?

"There is data that you are not seeing," says Deborah Zarin, director 
of the National Library of Medicine's online clinical trials 
registry. "There is a huge problem here if an unknown amount of the 
information is censored and you don't even know it is censored."

All told, about $58 billion in privately funded drug research is 
currently underway -- twice the basic federal medical research budget 
-- encompassing an estimated 50,000 clinical trials among 2.3 million 
patients. Even under the best of circumstances, though, the sheer 
volume of clinical testing has overwhelmed medicine's ability to 
independently assess these commercial trials and make all their 
results public, medical research analysts have concluded.

For a decade or more, researchers, federal regulators, pharmaceutical 
companies and medical journal editors have sought a balance between 
commercial secrecy, scientific openness and the public health. 
Incomplete test results can lull doctors into believing that drugs 
they prescribe are better than a placebo, and mislead scientists 
conducting follow-up studies.

Since 2004, prescription drug scandals over deceptive marketing, 
unreported side effects and hidden payments to medical researchers 
have highlighted the gap between the number of clinical trials 
conducted and the number published. That has prompted reforms in how 
commercial medical data is handled. The Pharmaceutical Research and 
Manufacturers Association of America, for example, created an online 
data base that summarizes clinical study results involving hundreds 
of prescription medicines.

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What You Don't Know About a Drug Can Hurt You

Alamy

Findings from many clinical studies assessing prescription drugs 
never see light of day.
What You Don't Know About a Drug Can Hurt You

What You Don't Know About a Drug Can Hurt You


By law, comprehensive clinical data must be filed at the U.S. Food 
and Drug Administration, to make the case for market approval of a 
new drug and form the basis for safety information that accompanies 
every prescription. All the critical information that a doctor or 
patient needs is summarized on the FDA-approved drug label, says Ken 
Johnson, senior vice president of the pharmaceutical research trade 
association, "including important drug safety information that may 
not be included in a published paper." Such information is updated 
regularly as new findings become available, industry experts say. "It 
is important for people to know that the FDA sees all of the data," 
says Jeffrey Francer, the trade association's assistant general counsel.

After years of congressional debate, however, the FDA now has imposed 
more stringent reporting requirements to ensure the complete 
scientific record of clinical drug experiments is readily available. 
Under a new federal law, researchers for the first time will have to 
post their basic results publicly on the federal online registry 
maintained by the National Library of Medicine.

Since it was established nine years ago as a voluntary patient guide, 
the federal registry at 
<http://www.ClinicalTrials.gov>www.ClinicalTrials.gov has logged 
65,000 studies. Prodded by medical journal editors and settlements in 
five major lawsuits, researchers have gone from registering 25 new 
studies a week to about 350 every week. Until this past September, 
though, researchers only had to report the start of a clinical trial. 
They had no federal obligation to report the outcome in the registry 
or in a peer-reviewed journal.

Several recent surveys of the medical literature offer a glimpse of 
how much data about drugs already on the market never made it into 
the published record.

Last month, analysts led by health research expert Lisa Bero at the 
University of California in San Francisco checked 164 clinical trials 
testing 33 different drugs submitted for FDA approval from 2001 to 
2002 and found that one in four had yet to be published. Almost all 
of the unpublished findings made the drug in question look bad.


Recommended Reading

Under a new 
<http://www.fda.gov/oc/initiatives/advance/fdaaa.html>federal law, 
researchers conducting clinical trials must post their findings 
publicly at an <http://clinicaltrials.gov/>online federal clinical 
trials registry maintained by the <http://www.nlm.nih.gov/>National 
Library of Medicine. <http://www.phrma.org/>The Pharmaceutical 
Research and Manufacturers Association of America also maintains 
summaries of clinical study results in an 
<http://www.clinicalstudyresults.org/>online data base.

Normally, clinical trials involving safety and effectiveness of new 
drugs are reported to the <http://www.fda.gov/default.htm>U.S. Food 
and Drug Administration but are not always published in peer-reviewed 
medical literature, University of California at San Francisco medical 
analysts reported in 
"<http://medicine.plosjournals.org/perlserv/?request=get-document&doi=10.1371/journal.pmed.0050217>Reporting
 
Bias in Drug Trials Submitted to the Food and Drug Administration: 
Review of Publication and Presentation," published in the journal 
<http://medicine.plosjournals.org/perlserv/?request=index-html&issn=1549-1676>PLoS
 
Medicine. Medical informatics experts at UCSF found that more than 
half of all supporting trials for FDA-approved drugs remained 
unpublished in 
"<http://medicine.plosjournals.org/perlserv/?request=get-document&doi=10.1371%2Fjournal.pmed.0050191>Publication
 
of Clinical Trials Supporting Successful New Drug Applications: A 
Literature Analysis," in PLoS Medicine.

Writing in <http://theoncologist.alphamedpress.org/>The Oncologist, 
researchers reported that many clinical trials of cancer chemotherapy 
drugs are not published, in 
"<http://theoncologist.alphamedpress.org/cgi/reprint/theoncologist.2008-0133v1>Practicing
 
on the Tip of an Information Iceberg? Evidence of Underpublication of 
Registered Clinical Trials in Oncology."

In 
<http://www.amazon.com/Drugs-Discovery-Approval-Rick-Ng/dp/047019510X/ref=pd_bbs_7?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1229031100&sr=8-7>Drugs:
 
 From Discovery to Approval, author Rick Ng offers a step-by-step 
introduction to all the key processes involved in bringing a drug to 
the market, including the performance of pre-clinical studies, the 
conduct of human clinical trials, and regulatory controls.

In 
<http://www.amazon.com/Truth-About-Drug-Companies-Deceive/dp/0375760946/ref=pd_bbs_10?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1229031100&sr=8-10>The
 
Truth About the Drug Companies: How They Deceive Us and What to Do 
About It, former New England Journal of Medicine Editor Marcia Angell 
explains how much of the revenue generated by "Big Pharma" goes into 
aggressive marketing campaigns.

In 
<http://www.amazon.com/Understanding-Pharma-Practical-Pharmaceutical-Companies/dp/0976309602/ref=pd_bbs_11?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1229031100&sr=8-11>Understanding
 
Pharma: The First, Practical Guide on How Pharmaceutical and Biotech 
Companies Really Work, John Campbell covers pharmaceutical research 
and discovery, clinical development, marketing, sales, and business 
development.

In September, medical informatics expert Ida Sim at UCSF and her 
colleagues reviewed 900 FDA filings involving 90 new drugs and 
reported that more than half of the clinical trials were still 
unpublished 5 years after the drugs had been approved.

Only one in five cancer clinical trials ever is disclosed in a 
medical journal, doctors at the University of Washington reported in 
the journal Oncology earlier this year.

"What's happening in oncology is happening in all other fields of 
medicine," says study co-author health economist Scott Ramsey at the 
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, who checked more 
than 2,000 chemotherapy trials recorded in the federal registry. "You 
may not get a full picture of whether a drug is effective or not. 
With the stakes being what they are in terms of money and human 
lives, this is a big problem in my view."

Moreover, when clinical data is published in one of 5,200 
peer-reviewed biomedical journals, the information on health risks 
and benefits may be biased by spin and selective reporting, medical 
analysts said.

For example, researchers who reviewed the FDA's regulatory paperwork 
for dozens of recently approved drugs found that in some clinical 
trials submitted for publication, conclusions had been changed, 
statistics revised, and outcomes altered to make treatments look more 
effective. Among 43 outcomes reported in the FDA filings that did not 
favor a drug, 20 were never published. In four out of five instances 
in which the statistical significance of findings was changed from 
the FDA filing, the published version was more favorable.

"We saw a lot of changes," Dr. Bero says. "All the changes that 
occurred made the drug look more favorable."

That reflected a broader pattern of medical research documented by 
Dr. Bero and other analysts. A study showcasing the promise of a new 
drug was more likely to be submitted for publication than one 
reporting negative findings. "It was not that journals are 
suppressing the information," Dr. Bero says. "People were not 
submitting the data."

Earlier this fall, researchers at the State University of New York 
reviewed 1,835 clinical research articles from four leading 
otolaryngology journals and reported that a third of them failed to 
mention any side effects at all. In half of those studies that did 
mention harmful effects, researchers failed to describe them.

"The evidence from clinical trials conducted by the companies that 
produce the drugs is really the only source of evidence for whether a 
drug works or not," Dr. Sim says. "The public deserves a fair 
representation of the evidence for and against expensive new drugs."

No one knows why so much test data was suppressed, overlooked or 
discarded. In the competitive hustle of academia and commerce, the 
public interest can just take second place to other considerations. 
"Journals want to sell journals; companies want to increase profits; 
and researchers would like to advance their careers," says Dr. An-Wen 
Chan, a medical policy analyst at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester. "They 
can conflict. Sometimes, decisions are not made in the best interest 
of the patients."

As of September, failure to report basic data about clinical test 
results on the federal public registry in a timely way can open 
researchers to fines of $10,000 a day and loss of their federal 
research funding. Scientists now are reporting their findings at a 
rate expected soon to reach 200 new studies every week. "From our 
perspective, it is very hard to argue now that there is not 
transparency," says the pharmaceutical association's Mr. Francer.

Even so, the new registry regulation only covers new tests. Registry 
reports of serious side effects won't be required until next year. 
The findings also won't be formally verified.

It will be at least another two years before all the new mandatory 
reporting requirements are in place and it may be a decade before 
anyone will know whether so much data disclosure actually improves 
patient well-being and the quality of care.

"The companies are still fighting every step of the way," Dr. Zarin 
says. "But they have realized there is a public relations advantage 
in appearing more transparent."
    * Robert Lee Hotz shares recommended reading on this topic and 
responds to reader comments at 
<http://WSJ.com/OnlineToday>WSJ.com/OnlineToday. Email him at 
<mailto:[email protected]>[email protected]

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