tomorrow…

Posted on Wednesday 11 June 2014

      Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow,
      Creeps in this petty pace from day to day,
      To the last syllable of recorded time;
      And all our yesterdays have lighted fools
      The way to dusty death…
      Macbeth by Wiliam Shakespeare
EurActiv
by Henriette Jacobsen
June 11, 2014

A growing number of health and consumer advocacy organisations are urging the European Medicines Agency (EMA) to rethink its proposals to restrict the viewing of clinical trial results ahead of a board meeting Thursday [12 June]. The EMA has proposed that future access to clinical trials results should be available ‘on screen only’. This version would exclude the possibility of individuals being able to print, distribute, or transfer the information, making scientific analysis of clinical study data "highly problematic" according to critics.

The results of all future clinical trials in Europe could eventually be made publicly accessible online because, on 2 April this year, the European Parliament voted in favour of a legislative proposal to make clinical trial data public. Last month, the European Ombudsman, Emily O’Reilly, wrote an open letter to the EMA’s executive director Guido Rasi, expressing concern that there has been "a significant change in EMA’s policy, which could undermine the fundamental right of public access to documents established by EU law."

{Read: EU Ombudsman worried over lack of transparency at medicines agency}

Likewise, Glenis Willmott, the previous rapporteur on the EU’s Clinical Trials Regulation, sent a letter to Rasi, saying she is very concerned about the EMA’s direction of the draft policy. "As has already been pointed out by numerous academic researchers, transparency campaigners, health and consumer organisations, as well as the European Ombudsman, the draft policy represents a step back from (the) EMA’s previous position and a step away from the provisions of the newly agreed Clinical Trials Regulation," the British MEP wrote.

Ahead of the EMA management board meeting Thursday, comprised mostly of representatives from EU member state health authorities, the European Consumer Organisation [BEUC] also encouraged the board to veto the new proposals. Ilaria Passarani, senior Health Policy Officer at BEUC, stated that public health interests should outweigh any consideration of commercial confidentiality. "EMA’s U-turn from earlier promises for more transparency is unacceptable. Should the plans go through as they are, consumers and researchers would have only partial access to trial reports, in ‘screen-only’ mode and with no possibility to save, print or transfer the information," Passarani said. “EMA is about to set an important precedent which could inspire regulators of medicines in the EU and beyond, provided transparency is put back at the heart of its new policy. We hope EMA will live up to expectations,” she added.

Dr Roberto Frontini, president of the European Association of Hospital Pharmacists [EAHP] stated that transparency in the reporting of clinical trial results matters."It matters because it is important in avoiding duplicated effort. It matters because patients participating do so on the basis that they are assisting wider scientific understanding of medical issues. It matters because independent secondary scrutiny of clinical trial results frequently yields new insights," Frontini stated.
The European Medicines Agency has a chance to do something decent tomorrow – not back down, but back up and think about what they are doing. They can set an example for the world by continuing on their original path to genuine Data Transparency, or they can fall prey to the same kind of strangulating commercial influences that have afflicted the US.
 
  1.  
    June 13, 2014 | 2:30 PM
     

    What is that crossed-finger icon supposed to mean? To me, it means “dishonesty ahead.”

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.