The House of Commons Science and Technology Committee has
expressed concern that nearly half of clinical trials fail to
publish their results. The Committee is calling for increased
transparency today, as it releases a new Report.
During its inquiry into research integrity earlier this year, the
Committee agreed to follow-up on work on ‘clinical trials
transparency’ by its predecessor Committee in 2013.
The Research integrity: clinical trials
transparency Report highlights the work previously done
by campaigners, which shows that a shocking 50% of clinical
trials do not publish any results, presenting risks to human
health and increasing research wastage.
The Committee is concerned that selective non-publication—‘or
publication bias'—of results distorts the published evidence base
and is a threat to research integrity.
The Health Research Authority (HRA) has been responsible for
‘promoting research transparency’ since 2014, but the Committee
concluded that not enough had been done to improve reporting
rates. The Committee wants the HRA to produce a strategy for
fixing this problem and believes its performance should be
measured against progress.
Witnesses pointed to explicit examples of ‘publication bias’
leading to wasted public expenditure in the UK and even patient
deaths in other countries. The examples included the Government’s
decision to stockpile millions of pounds’ worth of Tamiflu in
response to the H1N1 'Swine Flu' epidemic in 2009, when the
Committee heard that the Government was "relying on a marketing
spiel claiming successful trials of this drug rather than being
able to consider the actual evidence of the drug efficacy for
themselves".
A trials tracker website set up by Dr Ben Goldacre and
colleagues at the Evidence-Based Medicine Data Lab also reveals
that Public Health England has
three overdue trials dating from 2010–2016 relating to
meningitis vaccination.
Meanwhile, many NHS Trusts have high numbers of unreported
clinical trials according to the site: the Manchester University
NHS Foundation Trust has 13 overdue trials, NHS Greater Glasgow
and Clyde has 12 that are due to have reported, and both
Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and Hull and
East Yorkshire Hospitals NHS Trust have 11 outstanding trials.
Rt Hon , Chair of the Science and
Technology Committee, said:
“An astounding amount of information from clinical trials is
going unreported. The HRA must act now to ensure current
regulations are enforced and impose tough sanctions on those who
seem to think it is acceptable to disregard valuable research,
threaten research integrity and, in some cases, endanger human
life. Many of these trials are funded with public money and the
tax payer has a right to expect those who benefit from public
funding to follow the rules and publish in full.
“It is particularly disappointing that trusted bodies such as
Public Health England and a range of NHS Foundation Trusts are
failing to report results from clinical trials. Public trust in
medicine could easily be eroded by these failings from such
important parts of the health system.
“People take part in these trials in good faith, hoping to help
inform doctors and decision makers on vital issues affecting many
of us every day. Their efforts are betrayed if the results are
not made available at the end.
“The HRA must be provided with all of the necessary funding it
needs to produce an official list of which trials have reported
results and which ones haven’t. We would urge the HRA to
prioritise this issue and are disappointed with progress in
tackling the issue over the past four years.”
The Committee also recommends that:
- The Government should ask the HRA to publish, by December
2019, a detailed strategy for achieving full clinical trials
transparency, with a clear deadline and milestones for achieving
this. The performance of the HRA should then be explicitly
measured on this basis through its annual report.
- The HRA should be provided with funding to establish a
national programme to audit clinical trials transparency,
including the publication of a single official list of which UK
trials have published results and those which are due to but have
not.
- The HRA should introduce a system of sanctions to drive
improvements in clinical trials transparency, such as withdrawing
favourable ethical opinion or preventing further trials from
taking place, and the Government should consult specifically on
whether to provide the HRA with the statutory power to fine
sponsors for non-compliance.