Crackdown on unreported trials is good news for researchers

peter.suber's bookmarks 2018-11-16

Summary:

"On 30 October, the House of Commons Science and Technology Committee issued its long-expected report on clinical trials transparency. The report notes that even today, around half of all clinical trials in the UK still fail to post their results onto registries.

As official documents go, the report is remarkably candid—the word “disappointed” leaps off the pages again and again. The parliamentarians’ ire may have been heightened by the fact that five years earlier, a similar report from the same committee called for decisive government action, evidently to little effect.

The latest report singles out universities and NHS trusts for particular criticism, citing data from the recently launched EU Clinical Trials Tracker, an online transparency tool. The tracker paints an unflattering picture of academic institutions’ performance. Across Europe, only 11 per cent of university-sponsored trials have posted their results. In contrast, many pharmaceutical companies boast reporting rates of close to 100 per cent....

Most universities, however, seem to have missed the boat. In July, the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine was forced to admit that it did not even know how many trials it had sponsored, let alone how many had reported their results.

While institutional inertia seems to have been the main culprit, widespread ignorance of disclosure rules also played a role. Many universities were not aware that each and every clinical trial has to post its results within 12 months of completion, regardless of whether its outcomes have been published in a journal...."

Link:

https://www.researchresearch.com/news/article/?articleId=1378309

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » peter.suber's bookmarks

Tags:

oa.new oa.pharma oa.data oa.compliance oa.unfamiliarity oa.industry oa.universities oa.uk oa.hei

Date tagged:

11/16/2018, 12:07

Date published:

11/16/2018, 07:07