Clinical trial reporting performance of thirty UK universities on ClinicalTrials.gov—evaluation of a new tracking tool for the US clinical trial registry

Abstract Clinical trial transparency forms the foundation of evidence-based medicine, and trial sponsors, especially publicly funded institutions such as universities, have an ethical and scientific responsibility to make the results of clinical trials publicly available in a timely fashion. We asse...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sarai Mirjam Keestra, Florence Rodgers, Daphne Lenz, Rhiannon Osborne, Till Bruckner, Sean Lee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-06-01
Series:Trials
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13063-021-05330-5
id doaj-da17072dce1549acbe6893c5ac0d10d4
record_format Article
spelling doaj-da17072dce1549acbe6893c5ac0d10d42021-06-06T11:33:21ZengBMCTrials1745-62152021-06-012211710.1186/s13063-021-05330-5Clinical trial reporting performance of thirty UK universities on ClinicalTrials.gov—evaluation of a new tracking tool for the US clinical trial registrySarai Mirjam Keestra0Florence Rodgers1Daphne Lenz2Rhiannon Osborne3Till Bruckner4Sean Lee5Department of Global Health & Development, London School of Hygiene and Tropical MedicineSchool of Medicine, Imperial College LondonDepartment of Science, Technology and Society, University of ViennaSchool of Clinical Medicine, University of CambridgeBIH QUEST CenterMarket Securities LLPAbstract Clinical trial transparency forms the foundation of evidence-based medicine, and trial sponsors, especially publicly funded institutions such as universities, have an ethical and scientific responsibility to make the results of clinical trials publicly available in a timely fashion. We assessed whether the thirty UK universities receiving the most Medical Research Council funding in 2017–2018 complied with World Health Organization best practices for clinical trial reporting on the US Clinical Trial Registry ( ClinicalTrials.gov ). Firstly, we developed and evaluated a novel automated tracking tool ( clinical-trials-tracker.com ) for clinical trials registered on ClinicalTrials.gov . This tracker identifies the number of due trials (whose completion lies more than 395 days in the past) that have not reported results on the registry and can now be used for all sponsors. Secondly, we used the tracker to determine the number of due clinical trials sponsored by the selected UK universities in October 2020. Thirdly, using the FDAAA Trials Tracker, we identified trials sponsored by these universities that are not complying with reporting requirements under the Food and Drug Administration Amendments Act 2007. Finally, we quantified the average and median number of days between primary completion date and results posting. In October 2020, the universities included in our study were sponsoring 1634 due trials, only 1.6% (n = 26) of which had reported results within a year of completion. 89.8% (n = 1468) of trials remained unreported, and 8.6% (n = 140) of trials reported results late. We also identified 687 trials that contained inconsistent data, suggesting that UK universities often fail to update their data adequately on ClinicalTrials.gov . The mean reporting delay after primary completion for trials that posted results was 981 days, the median 728 days. Only four trials by UK universities violated the FDAAA 2007. We suggest a number of reasons for the poor reporting performance of UK universities on ClinicalTrials.gov : (i) efforts to improve clinical trial reporting in the UK have to date focused on the European clinical trial registry (EU CTR), (ii) the absence of a tracking tool for timely reporting on ClinicalTrials.gov has limited the visibility of institutions’ reporting performance on the US registry and (iii) there is currently a lack of repercussions for UK sponsors who fail to report results on ClinicalTrials.gov which should be addressed in the future.https://doi.org/10.1186/s13063-021-05330-5Clinical trialsTransparencyPublication biasResearch wasteClinicalTrials.govTracking tool
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sarai Mirjam Keestra
Florence Rodgers
Daphne Lenz
Rhiannon Osborne
Till Bruckner
Sean Lee
spellingShingle Sarai Mirjam Keestra
Florence Rodgers
Daphne Lenz
Rhiannon Osborne
Till Bruckner
Sean Lee
Clinical trial reporting performance of thirty UK universities on ClinicalTrials.gov—evaluation of a new tracking tool for the US clinical trial registry
Trials
Clinical trials
Transparency
Publication bias
Research waste
ClinicalTrials.gov
Tracking tool
author_facet Sarai Mirjam Keestra
Florence Rodgers
Daphne Lenz
Rhiannon Osborne
Till Bruckner
Sean Lee
author_sort Sarai Mirjam Keestra
title Clinical trial reporting performance of thirty UK universities on ClinicalTrials.gov—evaluation of a new tracking tool for the US clinical trial registry
title_short Clinical trial reporting performance of thirty UK universities on ClinicalTrials.gov—evaluation of a new tracking tool for the US clinical trial registry
title_full Clinical trial reporting performance of thirty UK universities on ClinicalTrials.gov—evaluation of a new tracking tool for the US clinical trial registry
title_fullStr Clinical trial reporting performance of thirty UK universities on ClinicalTrials.gov—evaluation of a new tracking tool for the US clinical trial registry
title_full_unstemmed Clinical trial reporting performance of thirty UK universities on ClinicalTrials.gov—evaluation of a new tracking tool for the US clinical trial registry
title_sort clinical trial reporting performance of thirty uk universities on clinicaltrials.gov—evaluation of a new tracking tool for the us clinical trial registry
publisher BMC
series Trials
issn 1745-6215
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Abstract Clinical trial transparency forms the foundation of evidence-based medicine, and trial sponsors, especially publicly funded institutions such as universities, have an ethical and scientific responsibility to make the results of clinical trials publicly available in a timely fashion. We assessed whether the thirty UK universities receiving the most Medical Research Council funding in 2017–2018 complied with World Health Organization best practices for clinical trial reporting on the US Clinical Trial Registry ( ClinicalTrials.gov ). Firstly, we developed and evaluated a novel automated tracking tool ( clinical-trials-tracker.com ) for clinical trials registered on ClinicalTrials.gov . This tracker identifies the number of due trials (whose completion lies more than 395 days in the past) that have not reported results on the registry and can now be used for all sponsors. Secondly, we used the tracker to determine the number of due clinical trials sponsored by the selected UK universities in October 2020. Thirdly, using the FDAAA Trials Tracker, we identified trials sponsored by these universities that are not complying with reporting requirements under the Food and Drug Administration Amendments Act 2007. Finally, we quantified the average and median number of days between primary completion date and results posting. In October 2020, the universities included in our study were sponsoring 1634 due trials, only 1.6% (n = 26) of which had reported results within a year of completion. 89.8% (n = 1468) of trials remained unreported, and 8.6% (n = 140) of trials reported results late. We also identified 687 trials that contained inconsistent data, suggesting that UK universities often fail to update their data adequately on ClinicalTrials.gov . The mean reporting delay after primary completion for trials that posted results was 981 days, the median 728 days. Only four trials by UK universities violated the FDAAA 2007. We suggest a number of reasons for the poor reporting performance of UK universities on ClinicalTrials.gov : (i) efforts to improve clinical trial reporting in the UK have to date focused on the European clinical trial registry (EU CTR), (ii) the absence of a tracking tool for timely reporting on ClinicalTrials.gov has limited the visibility of institutions’ reporting performance on the US registry and (iii) there is currently a lack of repercussions for UK sponsors who fail to report results on ClinicalTrials.gov which should be addressed in the future.
topic Clinical trials
Transparency
Publication bias
Research waste
ClinicalTrials.gov
Tracking tool
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s13063-021-05330-5
work_keys_str_mv AT saraimirjamkeestra clinicaltrialreportingperformanceofthirtyukuniversitiesonclinicaltrialsgovevaluationofanewtrackingtoolfortheusclinicaltrialregistry
AT florencerodgers clinicaltrialreportingperformanceofthirtyukuniversitiesonclinicaltrialsgovevaluationofanewtrackingtoolfortheusclinicaltrialregistry
AT daphnelenz clinicaltrialreportingperformanceofthirtyukuniversitiesonclinicaltrialsgovevaluationofanewtrackingtoolfortheusclinicaltrialregistry
AT rhiannonosborne clinicaltrialreportingperformanceofthirtyukuniversitiesonclinicaltrialsgovevaluationofanewtrackingtoolfortheusclinicaltrialregistry
AT tillbruckner clinicaltrialreportingperformanceofthirtyukuniversitiesonclinicaltrialsgovevaluationofanewtrackingtoolfortheusclinicaltrialregistry
AT seanlee clinicaltrialreportingperformanceofthirtyukuniversitiesonclinicaltrialsgovevaluationofanewtrackingtoolfortheusclinicaltrialregistry
_version_ 1721394014441177088