BMJ, doi: 10.1136/bmj.39376.447211.BE, (Published 16 November 2007)
Research
Financial ties and concordance between results and conclusions in meta-analyses: retrospective cohort study
Veronica Yank, clinical instructor1,
Drummond Rennie, professor2,
Lisa A Bero, professor3
1 Stanford University, Stanford Medical Group, Stanford, CA 94305-5765, USA,
2 University of California, San Francisco,
3 Clinical Pharmacy and Institute for Health Policy Studies, University of California, San Francisco
Correspondence to: V Yank vyank@stanford.edu
Objective To determine whether financial ties to one drug company
are associated with favourable results or
conclusions in
meta-analyses on antihypertensive drugs.
Design Retrospective cohort study.
Setting Meta-analyses published up to December 2004 that were not duplicates and evaluated the effects of antihypertensive drugs compared with any comparator on clinical end points in adults. Financial ties were categorised as one drug company compared with all others.
Main outcome measures The main outcomes were the results and conclusions of meta-analyses, with both outcomes separately categorised as being favourable or not favourable towards the study drug. We also collected data on characteristics of meta-analyses that the literature suggested might be associated with favourable results or conclusions.
Results 124 meta-analyses were included in the study, 49 (40%) of which had financial ties to one drug company. On univariate logistic regression analyses, meta-analyses of better methodological quality were more likely to have favourable results (odds ratio 1.16, 95% confidence interval 1.07 to 1.27). Although financial ties to one drug company were not associated with favourable results, such ties constituted the only characteristic significantly associated with favourable conclusions (4.09, 1.30 to 12.83). When controlling for other characteristics of meta-analyses in multiple logistic regression analyses, meta-analyses that had financial ties to one drug company remained more likely to report favourable conclusions (5.11, 1.54 to 16.92).
Conclusion Meta-analyses on antihypertensive drugs and with financial ties to one drug company are not associated with favourable results but are associated with favourable conclusions.

CiteULike
Complore
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Reddit
StumbleUpon
Technorati What's this?
This article has been cited by other articles:
-
Liberati, A., Altman, D. G., Tetzlaff, J., Mulrow, C., Gotzsche, P. C., Ioannidis, J. P.A., Clarke, M., Devereaux, P. J., Kleijnen, J., Moher, D.
(2009). The PRISMA Statement for Reporting Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses of Studies That Evaluate Health Care Interventions: Explanation and Elaboration. ANN INTERN MED
151: W-65-W-94
[Abstract]
[Full text]
-
Greenland, S.
(2009). Accounting for uncertainty about investigator bias: disclosure is informative: How could disclosure of interests work better in medicine, epidemiology and public health?. J. Epidemiol. Community Health
63: 593-598
[Full text]
-
Liberati, A., Altman, D. G, Tetzlaff, J., Mulrow, C., Gotzsche, P. C, Ioannidis, J. P A, Clarke, M., Devereaux, P J, Kleijnen, J., Moher, D.
(2009). The PRISMA statement for reporting systematic reviews and meta-analyses of studies that evaluate healthcare interventions: explanation and elaboration. BMJ
339: b2700-b2700
[Abstract]
[Full text]
-
Scott, P. J., Briggs, J. S.
(2009). A Pragmatist Argument for Mixed Methodology in Medical Informatics. Journal of Mixed Methods Research
3: 223-241
[Abstract]
-
Luty, J, Arokiadass, S M R, Easow, J M, Anapreddy, J R
(2009). Preferential publication of editorial board members in medical specialty journals. J. Med. Ethics
35: 200-202
[Abstract]
[Full text]
-
Jefferson, T, Di Pietrantonj, C, Debalini, M G, Rivetti, A, Demicheli, V
(2009). Relation of study quality, concordance, take home message, funding, and impact in studies of influenza vaccines: systematic review. BMJ
338: b354-b354
[Abstract]
[Full text]
-
Nasser, M., van Binsbergen, J., Javaheri, H., Yassiny, K.
(2008). Diet and nutrition advice from the Cochrane Library: is it useful for the consumers and family physicians?. Fam Pract
25: i60-i66
[Abstract]
[Full text]
-
Conen, D., Torres, J., Ridker, P. M
(2008). Differential Citation Rates of Major Cardiovascular Clinical Trials According to Source of Funding: A Survey From 2000 to 2005. Circulation
118: 1321-1327
[Abstract]
[Full text]
-
Chalkidou, K., Walley, T., Culyer, A., Littlejohns, P., Hoy, A.
(2008). Evidence-informed evidence-making. J Health Serv Res Policy
13: 167-173
[Abstract]
[Full text]
-
Whitlock, E. P., Lin, J. S., Chou, R., Shekelle, P., Robinson, K. A.
(2008). Using Existing Systematic Reviews in Complex Systematic Reviews. ANN INTERN MED
148: 776-782
[Abstract]
[Full text]
-
Bush, A.
(2008). Regulating spoons. Eur Respir J
31: 699-700
[Full text]
-
Noble, J. H Jr
(2008). Delve deeper to find the links. BMJ
336: 59-59
[Full text]
-
Chester, M. R
(2008). Consider palliative coronary intervention. BMJ
336: 59-59
[Full text]
-
Epstein, R. A
(2007). Influence of pharmaceutical funding on the conclusions of meta-analyses. BMJ
335: 1167-1167
[Full text]
Rapid Responses:
Read all Rapid Responses
- Consider the influence of equipment manufacturers on the ‘evidence’ for palliative coronary intervention
- Michael R Chester
bmj.com, 17 Nov 2007
[Full text]
- Surprising Non-Finding, Predictable Criticism
- John H Noble Jr
bmj.com, 17 Dec 2007
[Full text]
- How valid were the assessments of concordance between results and conclusions?
- Adam Jacobs
bmj.com, 15 Feb 2008
[Full text]