{"id":42084,"date":"2013-12-05T12:00:46","date_gmt":"2013-12-05T17:00:46","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/1boringoldman.com\/?p=42084"},"modified":"2013-12-05T11:41:45","modified_gmt":"2013-12-05T16:41:45","slug":"boreor","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/1boringoldman.com\/index.php\/2013\/12\/05\/boreor\/","title":{"rendered":"bor\/eor&#8230;"},"content":{"rendered":"<br \/>\n<blockquote>\n<div align=\"center\" class=\"big\"><a href=\"http:\/\/www.pharmalive.com\/pfizer-peels-back-the-curtain-on-clinical-trial-data\" target=\"_blank\">Pfizer Peels Back The Curtain On Clinical Trial Data<\/a><\/div>\n<div align=\"center\" class=\"big\"><strong><font color=\"#004400\">Pharmalot<\/font><\/strong><\/div>\n<div align=\"center\" class=\"middle\">by Ed Silverman<\/div>\n<div align=\"center\" class=\"small\">12\/04\/2013<\/div>\n<p align=\"justify\">In response to the growing debate over disclosure of clinical  trial data, Pfizer has announced an updated policy and web site that  will publish large amounts of information and offer a procedure for  independent researchers to obtain study data for analysis. And the  drugmaker boasts that its effort exceeds the voluntary aims recently  articulated by industry trade groups in the US and Europe. &ldquo;Pfizer&rsquo;s expanded policy, which you can read <a href=\"http:\/\/www.pfizer.com\/research\/clinical_trials\/trial_data_and_results\" target=\"_blank\">here<\/a>,  is part of a larger and evolving effort by those who create and use  clinical data to arrive at a transparent, harmonized process to expand  access in ways that protect patient privacy, respect the regulatory  process and maintain incentives to conduct new research,&rdquo; says Fred  Lewis-Hall, a Pfizer executive vice president and chief medical officer,  in a <a href=\"http:\/\/www.pfizer.com\/news\/press-release\/press-release-detail\/pfizer_expands_clinical_trial_data_access_policy_and_launches_data_access_portal\" target=\"_blank\">statement<\/a>. The move, which met with some criticism [see below], comes amid  increasing turmoil over clinical trial data transparency. &nbsp;A growing  chorus of researchers, regulators and patient advocates has been  pressuring drugmakers to release study data in the wake of scandals  involving different medicines. The push includes an online petition  created by the AllTrials campaign&#8230;<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">The Pfizer effort comes a year after GlaxoSmithKline committed to  creating a new procedure for disclosing data, a position that, until  recently, other drugmakers have not taken [<a href=\"http:\/\/www.pharmalive.com\/glaxo-peels-back-curtain-clinical-trial-data\" target=\"_blank\">read this<\/a>].  Glaxo has been largely praised for its plan, which got under way last  spring, although has already encountered push back from some researchers  who claim the drugmaker is too tightly controlling the release of data [<a href=\"http:\/\/www.pharmalive.com\/is-glaxo-keeping-its-commitment-to-releasing-paxil-trial-data\" target=\"_blank\">look here<\/a>]. Meanwhile, the European Medicines Agency has delayed implementing a  proposal to proactively make trial data, which is submitted in  connection with marketing approval for a drug, available to researchers  once an approval decision has been made [<a href=\"http:\/\/www.pharmalive.com\/ema-may-delay-finalizing-policy-for-disclosing-clinical-trial-data\" target=\"_blank\">back story]<\/a>.  The delay comes amid a squabble with two drugmakers that have gone to  court to prevent the agency from releasing data concerning several drugs [<a href=\"http:\/\/www.pharmalive.com\/transparency-abbvie-sues-ema-over-trial-data\" target=\"_blank\">see this<\/a>]&#8230;<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">However, drugmakers have increasingly found themselves on the  defensive over the perception that they are hiding data that could  either harm patients or lead to better health outcomes. Aside from  concerns that more regulators will push for more disclosure, this  central issue of trust is prompting industry to rethink its position and  find ways to compromise over releasing data. Toward that end, Pfizer  says it will publish synopses of clinical study reports filed with  regulatory agencies for approved products for which basic results are  posted in the ClinicalTrials.gov registry, but only dating to September  2007. These CSR synopses will include summary results for all primary  and secondary endpoints, but any data that could be used to identify  individual patients will be removed.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">The issue of releasing clinical study reports is a separate debate  within the larger debate. There appears to be general agreement about  avoiding the release of data that can specifically identify and,  possibly, compromise the privacy of individual trial parricipants. But  some critics argue that certain material can and should be released in  order to detect safety signals and can be accomplished with breaching  privacy. &quot;There is a real risk to be mitigated,&quot; says Hans Eichler, senior  medical officer at the EMA, who was speaking today at a conference on  clinical trial data disclosure issues at the Harvard University School  of Public Health.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">Pfizer, meanwhile, is also creating an external independent review  panel to consider all requests for trial data that is denied or only  partially approved by Pfizer and make a final decision [<a href=\"https:\/\/iirsubmission.pfizer.com\/_layouts\/InspiirePortal\/SignIn.aspx?ReturnUrl=%2fsites%2fpfizeriir%2fpages%2fdefault.aspx\" target=\"_blank\">make a request here]<\/a>. This is the same approach taken by Glaxo, although one of its panel members has done consulting work for the drugmaker [<a href=\"http:\/\/www.pharmalive.com\/glaxo-and-transparency-one-panel-member-has-a-conflict\" target=\"_blank\">read here]<\/a>&#8230; In addition, Pfizer plans to produce and distribute lay-language  summaries of trial results to participants who wish to receive them,  starting with trials that begin enrolling in 2014, in countries where  regulations permit, according to its statement. And the drugmaker is  piloting the use of technology to enable its trial participants to  download their own electronic clinical data collected in the trial.<\/p>\n<div align=\"justify\">&quot;I&#8217;m not impressed for the following reasons. This policy does not  cover all Pfizer trials, just more recent ones and&#8230; also does not  cover trials in which Pfizer medicines were used in off-label,  FDA-unapproved indications,&quot; writes Peter Doshi, a senior scientist at  Johns Hopkins University who is among several researchers calling for a  system for restoring invisible and abandoned trials, or RIAT [<a href=\"http:\/\/www.bmj.com\/content\/346\/bmj.f2865\" target=\"_blank\">see this<\/a>], and is advising researchers negotiating with Glaxo. &quot;And for the [newer, on-label] trials that are potentially available,  the policy does not allow third party access to patient-level data for a  minimum of six months following publication of the trial by Pfizer [so  no independent checking of the journal publication&#8217;s accuracy for a  minimum of half a year].&quot;<\/div>\n<\/blockquote>\n<div align=\"justify\">The day a clinical trial is <em>un&middot;blinded<\/em> is not a beginning, it&#8217;s an end. The way <strong><font color=\"#200020\">Phase 3, Randomized, Double&middot;Blind, Placebo&middot;Controlled Clinical Trials<\/font><\/strong> [RCTs] work is highly structured. They begin with a Protocol that precisely defines how the trial will be carried out in detail, including: how the subjects will be recruited, screened, and randomized; defining the indices that will be followed at what intervals; how those outcome variables will be analyzed and by what methods; how drop&middot;outs will be handled in those analyses; how Adverse Events will be monitored, recorded, and reported; etc. The Protocols are reviewed by Independent Review Boards to insure the safety of the subjects. The whole point is to eliminate bias. My experience in looking at the trials we can see isn&#8217;t extensive, but more than it used to be, and I&#8217;m actually impressed that the conduct of the trials isn&#8217;t usually where the problem lies. It can be. They can be done exploitively, usually in the third world. They can give too much or too little of a comparator drug. But in the main, the trials themselves are as advertised. The problem of bias begins the day the trial is<em> un&middot;blinded<\/em><em>.<\/em><\/div>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong>bor<\/strong> <sub>[<em>beginning of rant<\/em>]<\/sub>&#8230; In most Clinical Trials, the article could actually be written in advance of the <em>un&middot;blinding<\/em> [and maybe it should be]. Pre<em>&middot;<\/em>program which tables to compile, graphs to generate, statistics to run, and conclusions to be drawn based on the outcome cranked out by the computer. Such automation doesn&#8217;t happen and probably never will, but an alternative would be to make that outcome data available so that if there are questions of interpretation, someone else can have a shot at analyzing the data themselves. Many clinical trials have been strategically unpublished. And the published articles are filled with examples of selective publication bias &#8211; the data analyzed to fit the desired conclusion rather than to illustrate what the data actually says. That was never okay. Just because people got away with it in the past is no precedent for the future &#8211; in fact, the opposite. It&#8217;s a call to arms.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">The pharmaceutical companies are making offers like this one from Pfizer that have roadblocks to total access. They&#8217;re fighting to maintain control over the data release citing patient\/subject confidentiality, competitive advantage in the marketplace,&nbsp; the right to control access to the data, control its use, etc. One gets the idea that they think that the requested full data transparency will play havoc with their business plans. I expect they&#8217;re right about that, but that tells us something up front. Why would it, if everything is on the up and up? The published article is only a proxy for the actual results of the clinical trial [<a href=\"http:\/\/1boringoldman.com\/index.php\/2013\/09\/22\/proxies\/\" target=\"_blank\">proxies&#8230;<\/a>]. That space between the <em>un&middot;blinding<\/em> and the publication [or non-publication] has been treated as a sacred cow, used for creative interpretations that have often made a mockery of the science of data analysis.  <\/p>\n<div align=\"justify\">Why should anyone accept these restrictive offers? Why participate in leaving room for the same kind of deceit that has caused such a massive problem and been so regularly dangerous for our patients? Why is the problem honesty might cause the pharmaceutical industry something scientists and physicians should factor into the equation? How does the abysmal precedent of the recent decades support entering into that kind of negotiation? Once I get started, I seem to be able to generate a stream of questions about what&#8217;s going on right now. I suspect that data transparency really will put a damper on the lucrative business of drug manufacturing just as they seem to fear. Fine by me. People are taking a lot more medication than we ought to be prescribing and they ought to be taking, paying out a lot of money needlessly. If there&#8217;s collateral damage from honest science, so be it. This is no time to grasp at the shiny objects offered to deflect attention away from the painful reality we&#8217;ve allowed to fester for too many years.<strong> eor<\/strong> <sub>[<em>end of rant<\/em>]<\/sub>&#8230;<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Pfizer Peels Back The Curtain On Clinical Trial Data Pharmalot by Ed Silverman 12\/04\/2013 In response to the growing debate over disclosure of clinical trial data, Pfizer has announced an updated policy and web site that will publish large amounts of information and offer a procedure for independent researchers to obtain study data for analysis. 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