Pharma Timesby Peter MansellSeptember 17, 2013It is “unacceptable” that many clinical trials remain unregistered and unpublished. Moreover, “we have not been impressed by the Government’s efforts to resolve this problem to date”, a House of Commons committee has concluded. The current lack of transparency around clinical trials is undermining public trust, slowing the pace of medical progress and potentially putting patients at risk, says the House of Commons Science and Technology Committee in a wider report on the environment for clinical studies in the UK and the European Union.
The report is based on an inquiry launched in December 2012, which addressed issues such as transparency and disclosure of clinical-trial data; barriers to conducting trials in the UK and EU; the European Commission’s proposed revisions to the Clinical Trials Directive; and the role of the UK’s Health Research Authority in relation to clinical trials.
Registered, publishedThe Committee would like to see all trials conducted on treatments used in the National Health Service prospectively registered and the results published in a scientific journal. “While the focus should be on implementing this change for future trials, the Government must also do what it can to ensure that historic trials are registered and published, particularly where they have been publicly funded,” added Committee chair Andrew Miller MP.
The Committee also asks for government action to facilitate wider sharing of the raw data generated during clinical trials. It does not favour the uncontrolled release of “potentially sensitive” patient-level data, even in anonymised form. However, raw trial data are “currently underutilised and could be of significant scientific value if shared in a responsible and controlled way, with the knowledge and consent of patients”, Miller commented…
British Medical Journalby Iain ChalmersSeptember 25, 2013[posted in full at PharmaGossip]…In the UK, universal trial registration could have been introduced years ago had the national oversight of research ethics committees been blessed with the quality of leadership that it now has. In just over a year since her installation as chief executive of the Health Research Authority, Janet Wisely has achieved the political and professional consensus to enable her to announce that, from 30 September 2013, trial registration will be required as a condition for ethical approval. Without the uncertain and drawn out process of trying to introduce legislation to require trial registration, the authority has put in place the first step needed to monitor and deal with under-reporting of clinical research in this country.
Now that the authority has established the basis for complete registration of UK trials, it should be tasked to ensure that trialists’ use of its integrated research application system automatically generates a trial registration entry, and that the resulting records are used to create a UK clinical trials register. This register would not only allow UK specific monitoring of trial publication but would also meet the criteria for inclusion in the international clinical trials registry platform. Searches using this platform would then cover all UK trials and those registered in national registers in Australia, Brazil, China, Cuba, Germany, India, Iran, Japan, Korea, the Netherlands, New Zealand, and Sri Lanka, as well as those in the ISRCTN register, ClinicalTrials.gov, the European Union register, and the Pan-African registry .
The Health Research Authority could develop the integrated research application system to reduce the bureaucracy of trial registration for UK based trialists. The authority could also ensure that trial protocols become available routinely at the time of registration, and that user friendly information about currently recruiting trials is provided for potential trial participants.
116. We are supportive of the broad aims of the AllTrials campaign and agree that all clinical trials should be registered and their results reported. We suggest that the AllTrials campaign clearly set out what it considers a full trial report to contain, particularly when prepared for non-commercial purposes, so that its supporters can work together to achieve a specific set of common goals.
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