Clinical Center, Department of Bioethics, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland.
Clinical Center, Department of Bioethics, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland2Institute for Clinical and Economic Review, Boston, Massachusetts.
JAMA Intern Med. 2017 Mar 1;177(3):352-357. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2016.8439.
Little is known regarding whether Institute of Medicine (IOM) standards for managing conflicts of interest (COI) have been met in the development of recent important clinical guidelines.
To evaluate adherence to the IOM standards for limits on commercial COI, guideline development, and evaluation of evidence by the 2013 American College of Cardiology and American Heart Association cholesterol management guideline and the 2014 American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases and Infectious Diseases Society of America hepatitis C virus management guideline.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This study was a retrospective document review of the June 2014 print version of the cholesterol guideline and the final September 2015 print version of the hepatitis C virus guideline. Each guideline was assessed for adherence to the IOM standards for commercial COI published in the 2011 special report Clinical Practice Guidelines We Can Trust.
The IOM standards call for no commercial COI among guideline committee chairs and cochairs and for less than 50% of committee members to have commercial COI. Guideline and contemporaneous article disclosure statements were used to evaluate adherence to these standards. Each guideline was also reviewed for adherence to other IOM standards for guideline development and evidence review.
Among the 16 cholesterol guideline committee members, 7 (44%) disclosed commercial COI, all 7 reported industry-sponsored research, and 6 (38%) also reported consultancy. Of 3 guideline chairs and cochairs, 1 (33%) disclosed commercial COI. Review of contemporaneous articles identified additional commercial COI. Among the 29 hepatitis C virus guideline committee members, 21 (72%) reported commercial COI. Eighteen (62%) disclosed industry-sponsored research, 10 (34%) served on advisory boards, 5 (17%) served on data safety monitoring boards, 3 (10%) were consultants, and 3 (10%) reported other honoraria. Of 6 guideline cochairs, 4 (67%) disclosed commercial COI. All 4 disclosed additional COI in other publications that were not listed in their guideline disclosures. Contemporaneous literature review revealed an additional cochair with commercial COI. Of the 9 IOM guideline development and evidence standards, the cholesterol guideline met 5 (56%), and the hepatitis C virus guideline met them all.
Neither the cholesterol guideline nor the hepatitis C virus guideline fully met the IOM standards for commercial COI management, and discordance between committee leader guideline disclosures and those in contemporaneous articles was common. Adherence to additional IOM standards for guideline development and evidence review was mixed. Adoption of consistent COI frameworks across specialty societies may help ensure that clinical guidelines are developed in a transparent and trustworthy manner.
对于管理利益冲突(COI)的医学研究所(IOM)标准在最近的重要临床指南制定中是否得到满足,人们知之甚少。
评估 2013 年美国心脏病学会和美国心脏协会胆固醇管理指南以及 2014 年美国肝病研究协会和传染病学会丙型肝炎病毒管理指南中对 IOM 标准的限制商业 COI、指南制定和证据评估的遵循情况。
设计、设置和参与者:本研究是对 2014 年 6 月胆固醇指南的 2014 年 6 月印刷版和 2015 年 9 月丙型肝炎病毒指南的最终印刷版的回顾性文件审查。评估每个指南是否符合 2011 年《值得信赖的临床实践指南》特刊中发布的 IOM 标准。
IOM 标准要求指南委员会主席和副主席之间没有商业 COI,并且委员会成员中少于 50%的人有商业 COI。指南和同期文章披露声明用于评估这些标准的遵守情况。还审查了每个指南以评估其对其他 IOM 标准的遵守情况,这些标准适用于指南的制定和证据审查。
在 16 名胆固醇指南委员会成员中,有 7 名(44%)披露了商业 COI,所有人都报告了由行业赞助的研究,其中 6 名(38%)还报告了咨询。在 3 名指南主席和副主席中,有 1 名(33%)披露了商业 COI。对同期文章的审查发现了其他商业 COI。在 29 名丙型肝炎病毒指南委员会成员中,有 21 名(72%)报告了商业 COI。18 名(62%)披露了行业赞助的研究,10 名(34%)担任顾问委员会成员,5 名(17%)担任数据安全监测委员会成员,3 名(10%)担任顾问,3 名(10%)报告了其他酬金。在 6 名指南副主席中,有 4 名(67%)披露了商业 COI。所有 4 名副主席都在他们的指南披露中披露了其他出版物中的额外 COI,而这些出版物并未列入他们的指南披露中。同期文献回顾发现另一位副主席有商业 COI。在 9 项 IOM 指南制定和证据标准中,胆固醇指南符合 5 项(56%),丙型肝炎病毒指南符合所有标准。
胆固醇指南和丙型肝炎病毒指南均未完全满足 IOM 标准的商业 COI 管理要求,委员会领导的指南披露与同期文章之间的不一致很常见。对指南制定和证据审查的其他 IOM 标准的遵守情况参差不齐。在专业协会之间采用一致的 COI 框架可能有助于确保以透明和值得信赖的方式制定临床指南。