Beijers Lian, Jeronimus Bertus F, Turner Erick H, de Jonge Peter, Roest Annelieke M
University of Groningen, University Medical Center Groningen, Department of Psychiatry, Interdisciplinary Center Psychopathology and Emotion regulation (ICPE), Groningen, The Netherlands.
University of Groningen, Department of Developmental Psychology, Groningen, The Netherlands.
BMJ Open. 2017 Mar 29;7(3):e012886. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-012886.
This study aimed to determine the presence of spin in papers on positive randomised clinical trials (RCTs) of antidepressant medication for anxiety disorders by comparing concerns expressed in the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) reviews with those expressed in the published paper.
For every positive anxiety medication trial with a matching publication (n=41), two independent reviewers identified the concerns raised in the US FDA reviews and those in the published literature. Spin was identified when concerns or limitations were expressed by the FDA (about the efficacy of the study drug) but not in the corresponding published paper. Concerns mentioned in the papers but not by the FDA were scored as 'non-FDA' concerns.
Only six out of 35 (17%) of the FDA concerns pertaining to drug efficacy were reported in the papers. Two papers mentioned a concern that fit the FDA categories, but was not mentioned in the corresponding FDA review. Eighty-seven non-FDA concerns were counted, which often reflected general concerns or concerns related to the study design.
Results indicate the presence of substantial spin in the clinical trial literature on drugs for anxiety disorders. In papers describing RCTs on anxiety medication, the concerns raised by the authors differed from those raised by the FDA. Published papers mentioned a large number of generic concerns about RCTs, such as a lack of long-term research and limited generalisability, while they mentioned few concerns about drug efficacy. These results warrant the promotion of independent statistical review, reporting of patient-level data, more study of spin, and an increased expectation that authors report FDA concerns.
本研究旨在通过比较美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)审评意见与已发表论文中所表达的关注点,来确定关于抗焦虑药物的阳性随机临床试验(RCT)论文中是否存在倾向性表述。
对于每一项有匹配发表论文的抗焦虑药物阳性试验(n = 41),两名独立评审员确定美国FDA审评意见中提出的关注点以及已发表文献中的关注点。当FDA(关于研究药物的疗效)表达了关注点或局限性,但相应的已发表论文中未表达时,即确定存在倾向性表述。论文中提及但FDA未提及的关注点被记为“非FDA”关注点。
在35项与药物疗效相关的FDA关注点中,论文仅报告了6项(17%)。两篇论文提到了一个符合FDA分类的关注点,但在相应的FDA审评意见中未提及。共统计到87项非FDA关注点,这些关注点通常反映了一般性关注点或与研究设计相关的关注点。
结果表明,关于抗焦虑药物的临床试验文献中存在大量倾向性表述。在描述抗焦虑药物RCT的论文中,作者提出的关注点与FDA提出的关注点不同。已发表论文提到了大量关于RCT的一般性关注点,如缺乏长期研究和普遍性有限,而很少提及关于药物疗效的关注点。这些结果有必要推动独立的统计审评、患者层面数据的报告、对倾向性表述进行更多研究,并提高对作者报告FDA关注点的期望。