Ross Joseph S, Hill Kevin P, Egilman David S, Krumholz Harlan M
Department of Geriatrics and Adult Development, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, New York 10029, USA.
JAMA. 2008 Apr 16;299(15):1800-12. doi: 10.1001/jama.299.15.1800.
Authorship in biomedical publication provides recognition and establishes accountability and responsibility. Recent litigation related to rofecoxib provided a unique opportunity to examine guest authorship and ghostwriting, practices that have been suspected in biomedical publication but for which there is little documentation.
To characterize different types and the extent of guest authorship and ghostwriting in 1 case study.
Court documents originally obtained during litigation related to rofecoxib against Merck & Co Inc. Documents were created predominantly between 1996 and 2004. In addition, publicly available articles related to rofecoxib identified via MEDLINE.
All documents were reviewed by one author, with selected review by coauthors, using an iterative process of review, discussion, and rereview of documents to identify information related to guest authorship or ghostwriting.
Approximately 250 documents were relevant to our review. For the publication of clinical trials, documents were found describing Merck employees working either independently or in collaboration with medical publishing companies to prepare manuscripts and subsequently recruiting external, academically affiliated investigators to be authors. Recruited authors were frequently placed in the first and second positions of the authorship list. For the publication of scientific review papers, documents were found describing Merck marketing employees developing plans for manuscripts, contracting with medical publishing companies to ghostwrite manuscripts, and recruiting external, academically affiliated investigators to be authors. Recruited authors were commonly the sole author on the manuscript and offered honoraria for their participation. Among 96 relevant published articles, we found that 92% (22 of 24) of clinical trial articles published a disclosure of Merck's financial support, but only 50% (36 of 72) of review articles published either a disclosure of Merck sponsorship or a disclosure of whether the author had received any financial compensation from the company.
This case-study review of industry documents demonstrates that clinical trial manuscripts related to rofecoxib were authored by sponsor employees but often attributed first authorship to academically affiliated investigators who did not always disclose industry financial support. Review manuscripts were often prepared by unacknowledged authors and subsequently attributed authorship to academically affiliated investigators who often did not disclose industry financial support.
生物医学出版物的作者身份能带来认可,并确立责任归属。近期与罗非昔布相关的诉讼提供了一个独特契机,可审视客座作者身份和代笔行为,这些行为在生物医学出版物中一直受到怀疑,但相关记录很少。
在一个案例研究中描述客座作者身份和代笔行为的不同类型及程度。
最初在针对默克公司的罗非昔布诉讼期间获取的法庭文件。文件主要创建于1996年至2004年之间。此外,通过医学文献数据库(MEDLINE)识别出的与罗非昔布相关的公开文章。
所有文件由一位作者审阅,部分内容由共同作者参与审阅,采用反复审阅、讨论和再审阅的流程来识别与客座作者身份或代笔行为相关的信息。
约250份文件与我们的审阅相关。对于临床试验的出版物,发现有文件描述默克公司员工独立或与医学出版公司合作撰写手稿,随后招募外部学术附属研究人员作为作者。被招募的作者经常被排在作者名单的首位和第二位。对于科学综述论文的出版物,发现有文件描述默克公司营销员工制定手稿计划,与医学出版公司签约代笔手稿,并招募外部学术附属研究人员作为作者。被招募的作者通常是手稿的唯一作者,并因参与而获得酬金。在96篇相关已发表文章中,我们发现92%(24篇中的22篇)的临床试验文章披露了默克公司的资金支持,但只有50%(72篇中的36篇)的综述文章披露了默克公司的赞助情况或作者是否从该公司获得任何经济补偿。
对行业文件的这一案例研究综述表明,与罗非昔布相关的临床试验手稿由赞助商员工撰写,但第一作者身份往往归于学术附属研究人员,而这些人员并不总是披露行业资金支持情况。综述手稿往往由未署名的作者撰写,随后将作者身份归于学术附属研究人员,而这些人员也常常不披露行业资金支持情况。