Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5121754 Journal of Clinical Epidemiology 2017 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectiveTo identify variations in outcomes and results across reports of randomized clinical trials (RCTs).Study Design and SettingEligible RCTs examined gabapentin for neuropathic pain and quetiapine for bipolar depression, reported in public (e.g., journal articles) and nonpublic (e.g., clinical study reports) sources by 2015. We prespecified outcome domains. From each source, we collected “outcomes” (i.e., domain, measure, metric, method of aggregation, and time point); “treatment effect” (i.e., outcome plus the methods of analysis [e.g., how missing data were handled]); and results (i.e., numerical contrasts of treatment and comparison groups). We assessed whether results included sufficient information for meta-analysis.ResultsWe found 21 gabapentin (68 public, 6 nonpublic reports) and seven quetiapine RCTs (46 public, 4 nonpublic reports). For four (gabapentin) and seven (quetiapine) prespecified outcome domains, RCTs reported 214 and 81 outcomes by varying four elements. RCTs assessed 605 and 188 treatment effects by varying the analysis of those outcomes. RCTs reported 1,230 and 661 meta-analyzable results, 305 (25%) and 109 (16%) in public reports.ConclusionRCTs included hundreds of outcomes and results; a small proportion were in public reports. Trialists and meta-analysts may cherry-pick what they report from multiple sources of RCT information.

Related Topics
Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Public Health and Health Policy
Authors
, , , , , , ,