BMJ 2003;326:1171-1173 (31 May), doi:10.1136/bmj.326.7400.1171
Paper
Evidence b(i)ased medicineselective reporting from studies sponsored by pharmaceutical industry: review of studies in new drug applications
Hans Melander, senior biostatistician1,
Jane Ahlqvist-Rastad, senior medical officer1,
Gertie Meijer, documentalist1,
Björn Beermann, professor1
1 Medical Products Agency, Box 23, S-751 03 Uppsala, Sweden
Correspondence to: H Melander
hans.melander{at}mpa.se
Objectives To investigate the relative impact on publication bias
caused by multiple publication, selective publication, and selective reporting
in studies sponsored by pharmaceutical companies.
Design 42 placebo controlled studies of five selective serotonin
reuptake inhibitors submitted to the Swedish drug regulatory authority as a
basis for marketing approval for treating major depression were compared with
the studies actually published (between 1983 and 1999).
Results Multiple publication: 21 studies contributed to at least two
publications each, and three studies contributed to five publications.
Selective publication: studies showing significant effects of drug were
published as stand alone publications more often than studies with
non-significant results. Selective reporting: many publications ignored the
results of intention to treat analyses and reported the more favourable per
protocol analyses only.
Conclusions The degree of multiple publication, selective
publication, and selective reporting differed between products. Thus, any
attempt to recommend a specific selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor from
the publicly available data only is likely to be based on biased evidence.

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