Department of Public Policy, Society for Women's Health Research, Washington, District of Columbia 20036, USA.
J Womens Health (Larchmt). 2013 May;22(5):399-401. doi: 10.1089/jwh.2013.4400. Epub 2013 Apr 21.
Over the past decade, the scientific community has begun to recognize the importance of biological sex differences in disease pathology, diagnosis, prevention, and treatment; however, the practice of sex-specific analysis and reporting is not integrated as standard practice by either our federal health agencies or by major medical journals. Despite the reforms of 20 years ago and the general inclusion of women in drug clinical trials, we have yet to see data routinely analyzed and reported by sex. Major journals are not requiring it, and large, publicly available datasets, such as ClinicalTrials.gov , are not systematically collecting and pointing to it. However, federal health databases and medical journals have the potential to impact progress in sex-specific analysis and reporting. We conducted a search on ClinicalTrials.gov for phase III device clinical trials and assessed their practice of sex differences evaluation. Reporting of clinical trial results by sex will maximize scientific value of research investments, significantly impact clinical decision-making, and transform medical care.
在过去的十年中,科学界开始认识到生物性别差异在疾病病理、诊断、预防和治疗中的重要性;然而,无论是我们的联邦卫生机构还是主要医学期刊,都没有将性别特异性分析和报告作为标准实践来实施。尽管 20 年前进行了改革,并且通常将女性纳入药物临床试验,但我们仍未看到按性别进行常规分析和报告的数据。主要期刊并未对此提出要求,而像 ClinicalTrials.gov 这样的大型公开数据集也没有系统地收集和指向这一点。然而,联邦卫生数据库和医学期刊有可能影响性别特异性分析和报告的进展。我们在 ClinicalTrials.gov 上进行了一项关于 III 期器械临床试验的搜索,并评估了它们在性别差异评估方面的实践。按性别报告临床试验结果将最大限度地提高研究投资的科学价值,显著影响临床决策,并改变医疗保健。