GSK have promised to share all trial data: should we trust them? – Bad Science

abernard102@gmail.com 2012-10-14

Summary:

"... It is always good to hear a drug company making promises, and I hope that GSK will stick by the commitments they have made today. But we should judge drug companies by their actions, not by their promises, especially when similar promises have been made in the past, and then broken. In 1998 GlaxoWellcome promised to set up a clinical trials register, amidst outcry over withheld trial results. But when the company merged with SKB to create GSK, in 2002, this register was unceremonially deleted from the internet. This tragic story is described in an excellent open access article on this history of attempts to get access to hidden data, by Iain Chalmers. Then, in 2003, GSK were caught withholding clinical trial data showing that their drug seroxat increases the risk of suicide in young people. As part of the settlement on fraud charges, in the US in 2004, GSK were forced to promise to post all trial results on a public website. But in 2012 GSK paid a new $3bn fine for criminal and civil fraud: this included charges over withholding data on the diabetes drug Avandia, as late as 2007, well after this earlier promise of transparency was made. This pattern of broken promises around clinical trial transparency extends throughout the industry, and beyond. In 2005 the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors made a promise that they would only publish trials that had been publicly registered; but in 2009 it was found that they had routinely broken this promise.In 2007 the FDA Amendment Act promised that all trial results would be posted online at clinicaltrials.gov within a year; but in 2012 it was shown that only one in five trials had met this commitment. This is an ongoing scandal, harming patients, but incredibly, the ABPI – the UK pharmaceutical industry lobby - simply denies that the problem exists. I think Andrew Witty, the current head of GSK, is a good guy, and I discuss this at length in the afterword of Bad Pharma: because I don’t realistically think that we can rely on one person in one company being nice, as a strategy to address ongoing regulatory failure in a global $600bn industry where lives are at stake. So it is great that GSK has made further promises of greater transparency, but promises are not enough, because they have been broken in the past. We will only see if this promise is different, in the decade to come. It’s worth noting, by the way, that the US coverage of this GSK initiative was far more cautious, documented the problems with GSK’s behaviour in the past, and explained far more clearly that this is not about sharing the results of trials, but rather about sharing more detailed data from trials to help spot interesting patterns..."

Link:

http://www.badscience.net/2012/10/gsk-have-promised-should-we-trust-them/

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » abernard102@gmail.com

Tags:

oa.medicine oa.new oa.data oa.comment oa.legislation oa.litigation oa.history_of oa.biomedicine oa.glaxosmithkline oa.usa oa.fda oa.clinical_trials oa.pharma

Date tagged:

10/14/2012, 08:52

Date published:

10/14/2012, 04:52