McPartland John M
Department of Osteopathic Manipulative Medicine, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, USA.
PLoS One. 2009;4(3):e5092. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0005092. Epub 2009 Mar 31.
Previous research has shown that academic physicians conflicted by funding from the pharmaceutical industry have corrupted evidence based medicine and helped enlarge the market for drugs. Physicians made pharmaceutical-friendly statements, engaged in disease mongering, and signed biased review articles ghost-authored by corporate employees. This paper tested the hypothesis that bias affects review articles regarding rimonabant, an anti-obesity drug that blocks the central cannabinoid receptor.
METHODS/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: A MEDLINE search was performed for rimonabant review articles, limited to articles authored by USA physicians who served as consultants for the company that manufactures rimonabant. Extracted articles were examined for industry-friendly bias, identified by three methods: analysis with a validated instrument for monitoring bias in continuing medical education (CME); analysis for bias defined as statements that ran contrary to external evidence; and a tally of misrepresentations about the endocannabinoid system. Eight review articles were identified, but only three disclosed authors' financial conflicts of interest, despite easily accessible information to the contrary. The Takhar CME bias instrument demonstrated statistically significant bias in all the review articles. Biased statements that were nearly identical reappeared in the articles, including disease mongering, exaggerating rimonabant's efficacy and safety, lack of criticisms regarding rimonabant clinical trials, and speculations about surrogate markers stated as facts. Distinctive and identical misrepresentations regarding the endocannabinoid system also reappeared in articles by different authors.
The findings are characteristic of bias that arises from financial conflicts of interest, and suggestive of ghostwriting by a common author. Resolutions for this scenario are proposed.
先前的研究表明,受制药行业资助的学术医生破坏了循证医学,并助力扩大了药品市场。医生发表了有利于制药行业的言论,参与了疾病炒作,并签署了由企业员工代笔的有偏见的综述文章。本文检验了一种假设,即偏见会影响关于利莫那班(一种阻断中枢大麻素受体的抗肥胖药物)的综述文章。
方法/主要发现:对利莫那班综述文章进行了医学文献数据库(MEDLINE)检索,仅限于由担任利莫那班生产公司顾问的美国医生撰写的文章。对提取的文章进行行业友好型偏见检查,通过三种方法识别:使用经过验证的持续医学教育(CME)偏见监测工具进行分析;将与外部证据相悖的陈述定义为偏见进行分析;统计关于内源性大麻素系统的错误表述。共识别出8篇综述文章,但只有3篇披露了作者的财务利益冲突,尽管有容易获取的相反信息。塔哈尔CME偏见工具在所有综述文章中均显示出具有统计学意义的偏见。文章中再次出现了几乎相同的有偏见陈述,包括疾病炒作、夸大利莫那班的疗效和安全性、对利莫那班临床试验缺乏批评以及将关于替代标志物的推测当作事实。不同作者的文章中也再次出现了关于内源性大麻素系统独特且相同的错误表述。
这些发现具有因财务利益冲突而产生的偏见特征,并暗示存在共同作者代笔的情况。针对这种情况提出了解决方案。