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Published in: Journal of Neuro-Oncology 1/2018

01-08-2018 | Clinical Study

The relationship of study and authorship characteristics on trial sponsorship and self-reported conflicts of interest among neuro-oncology clinical trials

Authors: Srinivas Raman, Fabio Y. Moraes, Lucas C. Mendez, Neil K. Taunk, John H. Suh, Luis Souhami, Ben Slotman, Paul Kongkham, Daniel E. Spratt, Alejandro Berlin, Gustavo N. Marta

Published in: Journal of Neuro-Oncology | Issue 1/2018

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Abstract

Propose

To examine the association between trial sponsorship sources, self-reported conflicts of interest (COI), and study and author characteristics in central nervous system (CNS) oncology clinical trials (CT).

Methods

MEDLINE search was performed for original CT on “Central Nervous System Neoplasms“[Mesh]. The investigators assessed for relationships between funding source (industry, academic or cooperative, none, not described), COI (presented, none, or not reported), CT, and author characteristics.

Results

From 2010 to 2015, 319 CT were considered eligible. The majority of the studies involved primary gliomas (55.2%) and were Phase II CT (59.2%). Drug therapy was investigated in 83.0% of the CT. The remaining studies investigated surgery or radiotherapy. A minority of papers were published in journals with impact factor (IF) higher than > 10 (16%) or in regions other than North America and Europe (20.4%). Overall, 83.1% of studies disclosed funding sources: 32.6% from industry alone, 33.9% from an academic or cooperative group, and 10.7% from a mixed funding model. COI data was reported by 85.9% of trials, of which 56.2% reported no COI and 43.8% reported a related COI. Significant predictors for sponsorship (industry and/or academia) on univariate analysis were study design, type of intervention, journal impact factor, study conclusion, transparency of COI and presence of COI. On multivariate analysis, type of intervention, (P < 0.001), journal impact factor (IF) (P = 0.003), presence of COI (P < 0.001) and study conclusion (P = 0.003) remained significant predictors of sponsorship. For predicting COI, significant variables on univariate analysis were disease type, type of intervention, journal IF, funding source, and intervention arm being related to sponsor. On multivariate analysis, disease type (P = 0.003), journal IF (P < 0.001), type of intervention (P = 0.001), and funding source (P = 0.008) remained significant.

Conclusions

The majority of CNS CT reported some external funding sources and non-related COI. We identified that drug trials, higher IF, presence of COI, and a neutral or negative study conclusion are associated with external funding. Likewise drug trials, higher IF, and glioma trials are associated with presence of COI.
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Metadata
Title
The relationship of study and authorship characteristics on trial sponsorship and self-reported conflicts of interest among neuro-oncology clinical trials
Authors
Srinivas Raman
Fabio Y. Moraes
Lucas C. Mendez
Neil K. Taunk
John H. Suh
Luis Souhami
Ben Slotman
Paul Kongkham
Daniel E. Spratt
Alejandro Berlin
Gustavo N. Marta
Publication date
01-08-2018
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of Neuro-Oncology / Issue 1/2018
Print ISSN: 0167-594X
Electronic ISSN: 1573-7373
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11060-018-2860-2

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