Clinical Trial Registration: A Statement from the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors
Catherine De Angelis, M.D., M.P.H., Jeffrey M. Drazen, M.D., Frank A. Frizelle, M.B., Ch.B., M.Med.Sc., F.R.A.C.S., Charlotte Haug, M.D., Ph.D., M.Sc., John Hoey, M.D., Richard Horton, F.R.C.P., Sheldon Kotzin, M.L.S., Christine Laine, M.D., M.P.H., Ana Marusic, M.D., Ph.D., A. John P.M. Overbeke, M.D., Ph.D., Torben V. Schroeder, M.D., D.M.Sc., Hal C. Sox, M.D., and Martin B. Van Der Weyden, M.D.
Altruism and trust lie at the heart of research on human subjects.Altruistic individuals volunteer for research because they trustthat their participation will contribute to improved healthfor others and that researchers will minimize risks to participants.In return for the altruism and trust that make clinical researchpossible, the research enterprise has an obligation to conductresearch ethically and to report it honestly. Honest reportingbegins with revealing the existence of all clinical studies,even those that reflect unfavorably on a research sponsor'sproduct.
Unfortunately, selective reporting of trials does occur, andit distorts the body of evidence available for clinical decision-making.Researchers (and journal editors) are generally most enthusiasticabout the publication of trials that show either a large effectof a new treatment (positive trials) or equivalence of two approachesto treatment (non-inferiority trials). Researchers (and journals)typically are less excited about trials that show that a newtreatment is inferior to standard treatment (negative trials)and even less interested in trials that are neither clearlypositive nor clearly negative, since inconclusive trials willnot in themselves change practice. Irrespective of their scientificinterest, trial results that place financial interests at riskare particularly likely to remain unpublished and hidden frompublic view. The interests of the sponsor or authors notwithstanding,anyone should be able to learn of any trial's existence andits important characteristics.
The case against selective reporting is particularly compellingfor research that tests interventions that could enter mainstreamclinical practice. Rather than a single trial, it is usuallya body of evidence, consisting of many studies, that changesmedical practice. When research sponsors or investigators concealthe presence of selected trials, these studies cannot influencethe thinking of patients, clinicians, other researchers, andexperts who write practice guidelines or decide on insurance-coveragepolicy. If all trials are registered in a public repositoryat their inception, every trial's existence is part of the publicrecord and the many stakeholders in clinical research can explorethe full range of clinical evidence. We are far from this idealat present, since trial registration is largely voluntary, registrydata sets and public access to them varies, and registries containonly a small proportion of trials. In this editorial, publishedsimultaneously in all member journals, the International Committeeof Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) proposes comprehensive trialsregistration as a solution to the problem of selective awarenessand announces that all eleven ICMJE member journals will adopta trials-registration policy to promote this goal.
The ICMJE member journals will require, as a condition of considerationfor publication, registration in a public trials registry. Trialsmust register at or before the onset of patient enrollment.This policy applies to any clinical trial starting enrollmentafter July 1, 2005. For trials that began enrollment beforethis date, the ICMJE member journals will require registrationby September 13, 2005, before considering the trial for publication.We speak only for ourselves, but we encourage editors of otherbiomedical journals to adopt similar policies. For this purpose,the ICMJE defines a clinical trial as any research project thatprospectively assigns human subjects to intervention or comparisongroups to study the cause-and-effect relationship between amedical intervention and a health outcome. Studies designedfor other purposes, such as to study pharmacokinetics or majortoxicity (e.g., phase 1 trials), would be exempt.
The ICMJE does not advocate one particular registry, but itsmember journals will require authors to register their trialin a registry that meets several criteria. The registry mustbe accessible to the public at no charge. It must be open toall prospective registrants and managed by a not-for-profitorganization. There must be a mechanism to ensure the validityof the registration data, and the registry should be electronicallysearchable. An acceptable registry must include at minimum thefollowing information: a unique identifying number, a statementof the intervention (or interventions) and comparison (or comparisons)studied, a statement of the study hypothesis, definitions ofthe primary and secondary outcome measures, eligibility criteria,key trial dates (registration date, anticipated or actual startdate, anticipated or actual date of last follow-up, plannedor actual date of closure to data entry, and date trial dataconsidered complete), target number of subjects, funding source,and contact information for the principal investigator. To ourknowledge, at present, only www.clinicaltrials.gov, sponsoredby the United States National Library of Medicine, meets theserequirements; there may be other registries, now or in the future,that meet all these requirements.
Registration is only part of the means to an end; that end isfull transparency with respect to performance and reportingof clinical trials. Research sponsors may argue that publicregistration of clinical trials will result in unnecessary bureaucraticdelays and destroy their competitive edge by allowing competitorsfull access to their research plans. We argue that enhancedpublic confidence in the research enterprise will compensatefor the costs of full disclosure. Patients who volunteer toparticipate in clinical trials deserve to know that their contributionto improving human health will be available to inform healthcare decisions. The knowledge made possible by their collectivealtruism must be accessible to everyone. Required trial registrationwill advance this goal.
Catherine De Angelis, M.D., M.P.H. Editor-in-Chief, JAMA
Jeffrey M. Drazen, M.D. Editor-in-Chief, New England Journalof Medicine
Prof. Frank A. Frizelle, M.B., Ch.B., M.Med.Sc., F.R.A.C.S. Editor, The New Zealand Medical Journal
Charlotte Haug, M.D., Ph.D., M.Sc. Editor-in-Chief, NorwegianMedical Journal
John Hoey, M.D. Editor, CMAJ
Richard Horton, F.R.C.P. Editor, The Lancet
Sheldon Kotzin, M.L.S. Executive Editor, MEDLINE National Library of Medicine
Christine Laine, M.D., M.P.H. Senior Deputy Editor, Annals of Internal Medicine
Ana Marusic, M.D., Ph.D. Editor, Croatian Medical Journal
A. John P.M. Overbeke, M.D., Ph.D. Executive Editor, Nederlands Tijdschrift voor Geneeskunde (Dutch Journal of Medicine)
Torben V. Schroeder, M.D., D.M.Sc. Editor, Journal of theDanish Medical Association
Hal C. Sox, M.D. Editor, Annals of Internal Medicine
Martin B. Van Der Weyden, M.D. Editor, The Medical Journalof Australia
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