Phillips Adam T, Desai Nihar R, Krumholz Harlan M, Zou Constance X, Miller Jennifer E, Ross Joseph S
Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, MA, USA.
Section of Cardiovascular Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.
Trials. 2017 Jul 18;18(1):333. doi: 10.1186/s13063-017-2068-3.
Selective clinical trial publication and outcome reporting has the potential to bias the medical literature. The 2007 Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Amendment Act (FDAAA) mandated clinical trial registration and outcome reporting on ClinicalTrials.gov, a publicly accessible trial registry.
Using publicly available data from ClinicalTrials.gov, FDA documents, and PubMed, we determined registration, publication, and reporting of findings for all efficacy trials supporting FDA approval of new drugs for cardiovascular disease and diabetes between 2005 and 2014, before and after the FDAAA. For published trials, we compared the published interpretation of the findings (positive, equivocal, or negative) with the FDA reviewer's interpretation.
Between 2005 and 2014, the FDA approved 30 drugs for 32 indications of cardiovascular disease (n = 17) and diabetes (n = 15) on the basis of 183 trials (median per indication 5.7 (IQR, 3-8)). Compared with pre FDAAA, post-FDAAA studies were more likely to be registered (78 of 78 (100%) vs 73 of 105 (70%); p < 0.001), to be published (76 of 78 (97%) vs 93 of 105 (89%); p = 0.03), and to present findings concordant with the FDA reviewer's interpretation (74 of 76 (97%) vs 78 of 93 (84%); p = 0.004). Pre FDAAA, the FDA reviewer interpreted 80 (76%) trials as positive and 91 (98%) were published as positive. Post FDAAA, the FDA reviewer interpreted 71 (91%) trials as positive and 71 (93%) were published as positive.
FDAAA was associated with increased registration, publication, and FDA-concordant outcome reporting for trials supporting FDA approval of new drugs for cardiovascular disease and diabetes.
选择性的临床试验发表和结果报告可能会使医学文献产生偏差。2007年美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)修订法案(FDAAA)规定了在ClinicalTrials.gov(一个可公开访问的试验注册库)上进行临床试验注册和结果报告。
利用ClinicalTrials.gov、FDA文件和PubMed中的公开数据,我们确定了2005年至2014年期间(FDAAA前后)支持FDA批准用于心血管疾病和糖尿病的新药的所有疗效试验的注册、发表和结果报告情况。对于已发表的试验,我们将发表的结果解读(阳性、不明确或阴性)与FDA审评员的解读进行了比较。
2005年至2014年期间,FDA基于183项试验批准了30种药物用于32种心血管疾病(n = 17)和糖尿病(n = 15)适应症(每个适应症中位数为5.7(四分位间距,3 - 8))。与FDAAA之前相比,FDAAA之后的研究更有可能进行注册(78项中的78项(100%)对105项中的73项(70%);p < 0.001)、发表(78项中的76项(97%)对105项中的93项(89%);p = 0.03),并且呈现与FDA审评员解读一致的结果(76项中的74项(97%)对93项中的78项(84%);p = 0.004)。在FDAAA之前,FDA审评员将80项(76%)试验解读为阳性,其中91项(98%)发表为阳性。在FDAAA之后,FDA审评员将71项(91%)试验解读为阳性,其中71项(93%)发表为阳性。
FDAAA与支持FDA批准用于心血管疾病和糖尿病的新药的试验中注册、发表以及与FDA一致的结果报告的增加相关。