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Still some way to go
The BMJ and other journals are making
progress with managing the problem of competing interests (or conflicts
of interest, as most journals call them). Today we take two further
steps forward by posting on our website the competing interests of
editors, our editorial board, and our group executive
(http://bmj.com/aboutsite/competing_interests.shtml) and by
publishing a study we have conducted that shows that readers' reactions
to research are strongly influenced by statements of competing
interests.1 We still, however, have some way to go to the
fully transparent world that is desirable.
The history of medical journals and conflict of interest might be
cruelly summarised as lots of rhetoric and not much action. The
International Committee of Medical Journal Editors produced a policy on
conflicts of interest as long ago as 1993,2 but several
studies have shown that such conflicts are rarely declared in most
journals At the BMJ all authors and reviewers of original articles,
editorials, and most other material are asked to complete competing interests forms, and declarations of the competing interests of authors
are made with every article.10 We have now instituted a
system to ensure that the role of sponsors is made clear, and anybody
submitting a rapid response is required by the electronic system to
make a statement on whether they have competing interests. Our main
means of managing competing interests is disclosure, but sometimes the
conflict is so strong that it disbars somebody from being an author or
a reviewer.
The slow progress of journals with managing conflicts of interest is
bothersome because evidence is strengthening that they have a strong
influence on the interpretation of evidence. A study of authors from
many journals showed that people with financial relationships with
manufacturers of calcium channel antagonists were much more likely to
be supportive of the drugs.3 Yet they rarely declared
those conflicts. The major determinant of whether reviews of passive
smoking concluded it was harmful was whether the authors had financial
ties with tobacco manufacturers.11 In the disputed topic
of whether third generation contraceptive pills cause an increase in
thromboembolic disease, studies funded by the pharmaceutical
industry find that they don't, and studies funded by public money find
that they do.12 A recent strange decision of the
American Heart Association to declare alteplase a class I (definitely
recommended) intervention for stroke despite controversy about its
safety and efficacy seemed less strange when we learnt that the
manufacturers of the drug had donated $11m (£7m; There isn't anything wrong in having competing interests. They may be
near universal in medicine. Most doctors have had their lunch bought
for them by a pharmaceutical company and write their prescriptions with
pens provided by the industry. Many have been flown to very agreeable
locations by the companies to listen to speakers, staying We must recognise too that we are influenced by those conflicts. None
of us likes to think that we are influenced by advertising. But we are.
Double blind randomised controlled trials are necessary for testing new
treatments not because those conducting trials are dishonest but
because bias is pervasive and acts on us unconsciously. We deceive
ourselves if we think that we understand exactly why we behave as we
do. We are human beings, deeply flawed creatures.
Although as authors we may be slow to recognise the importance of
conflicts of interest, it seems that as readers we do. In our study we
sent randomly to BMJ readers the same paper with or without
a statement of competing interests.1 We asked readers to
score the study for interest, importance, relevance, validity, and
believability. We thought that the competing interest statement might
lead readers to score the study lower on believability. In fact they
scored it significantly lower on every measure. Our study had several
weaknesses, and we are repeating it It is human to be concerned about the accountability of others and
unconcerned about our own accountability. Thus editors have been keen
to act on the sins of authors but unable to act on their own
sins.14 Similarly we have been busy disclosing the
competing interests of authors but have not disclosed our own. Today we
do, although the process of getting everybody to disclose their
competing interests has been protracted and readers will see some
holes. We have declared the interests not only of editors and our
editorial board but also of our executive team These are, we believe, steps in the right direction, but important
questions remain. Our policy requires people to declare financial
conflicts of interest and encourage them to declare non-financial ones.
This is partly because most of the evidence relates to financial
conflicts of interest and because defining non-financial conflicts is
hard. But should we go further? Another question is whether we should
ask people to declare the scale of their financial conflicts of
interest? Charles Warlow, president of the Association of British
Neurologists, raised this question in the debate over the American
Heart Association and alteplase.16 It seems likely that
different degrees of conflict are probably raised by being bought a
cheese sandwich by a company or by being flown on Concorde to New York
to give a lecture and spend five days in the Ritz-Carlton Hotel. But at
the moment we don't ask for amounts, partly because we British are even
more embarrassed to talk about money than about our sex lives. But
should we change?
BMJ
despite good evidence that most authors have them.3-7 The international committee strengthened its
policy in 2001 by stating that journals should declare the exact role of sponsors (often pharmaceutical companies) in studies and decline to
publish studies where the sponsors controlled the decision on
publication.
8 9
This policy too has yet to be widely
implemented.7
11m) to the
association and that six of the nine members on the panel making the
decision had undeclared financial ties to the
manufacturers.13
at the
companies' expense
at the best hotels. The problem with
conflicts of interest is not declaring them.
but its results are very
interesting. Those who worry that concern about conflict of interest is
simply political correctness may have their worst fears confirmed:
readers do seem to discount heavily studies with competing interest
statements. On the other hand, the study perhaps shows that we all know
that conflicts of interest can have a profound effect.
because there are
examples of publication committees getting into trouble over undeclared
conflicts of interest.15 We haven't yet declared the
competing interests of the board of BMJ Publishing Group
Limited
because the company has only just come into existence and the
board just been elected. Similarly we haven't declared the interests of
our editorial advisers because we have recently appointed new ones. The
competing interests of all these people will be posted soon.
Footnotes
Competing interests: RS has no competing interests that relate directly to this article, but a list of all his competing interests appear on bmj.com/
| 1. |
Chaudhry S, Schroter S, Smith R, Morris J.
Does declaration of competing interests affect reader perceptions? A randomised trial.
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2002;
325:
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| 2. | International Committee of Medical Journal Editors. Conflict of interest. Lancet 1993; 341: 742-743[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]. |
| 3. |
Stelfox HT, Chua G, O'Rourke K, Detsky AS.
Conflict of interest in the debate over calcium channel antagonists.
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1998;
338:
101-105 |
| 4. | Monmaney T. Medical journals may have flouted own ethics 8 times. Los Angeles Times 1999 October 21. |
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Hussain A, Smith R.
Declaring financial competing interests: survey of five general medical journals.
BMJ
2001;
323:
263-264 |
| 7. |
Smith R.
Journals fail to adhere to guidelines on conflicts of interest.
BMJ
2001;
323:
651 |
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Davidoff F, DeAngelis CD, Drazen JM, Nicholls MG, Hoey J, Hojgaard L, et al.
Sponsorship, authorship, and accountability.
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825-826 |
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Smith R.
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Smith R.
Beyond conflict of interest.
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317:
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| 11. |
Barnes DE, Bero LA.
Why review articles on the health effects of passive smoking reach different conclusions.
JAMA
1998;
279:
1566-1570 |
| 12. |
Vandenbroucke JP.
Competing interests and controversy about third generation oral contraceptives.
BMJ
2000;
320:
381 |
| 13. |
Lenzer J.
Alteplase for stroke: money and optimistic claims buttress the "brain attack" campaign.
BMJ
2002;
324:
723-729 |
| 14. | Altman DG, Chalmers I, Herxheimer A. Is there a case for an international medical scientific press council? JAMA 1994; 272: 166-167[Abstract]. |
| 15. |
Gottlieb S.
New England Journal's publisher in conflict of interest dispute.
BMJ
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319:
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| 16. | Warlow C. Who pays the guideline writers? BMJ 2002; 324: 723-729. |
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