Abstract

BackgroundLittle is known about how adverse events are summarised and reported in trials, as detailed information is usually considered confidential. We have acquired clinical study reports (CSRs) from the European Medicines Agency through the Freedom of Information Act. The CSRs describe the results of studies conducted as part of the application for marketing authorisation for the slimming pill orlistat. The purpose of this study was to study how adverse events were summarised and reported in study protocols, CSRs, and published papers of orlistat trials.Methods and FindingsWe received the CSRs from seven randomised placebo controlled orlistat trials (4,225 participants) submitted by Roche. The CSRs consisted of 8,716 pages and included protocols. Two researchers independently extracted data on adverse events from protocols and CSRs. Corresponding published papers were identified on PubMed and adverse event data were extracted from this source as well. All three sources were compared. Individual adverse events from one trial were summed and compared to the totals in the summary report.None of the protocols or CSRs contained instructions for investigators on how to question participants about adverse events. In CSRs, gastrointestinal adverse events were only coded if the participant reported that they were “bothersome,” a condition that was not specified in the protocol for two of the trials. Serious adverse events were assessed for relationship to the drug by the sponsor, and all adverse events were coded by the sponsor using a glossary that could be updated by the sponsor. The criteria for withdrawal due to adverse events were in one case related to efficacy (high fasting glucose led to withdrawal), which meant that one trial had more withdrawals due to adverse events in the placebo group. Finally, only between 3% and 33% of the total number of investigator-reported adverse events from the trials were reported in the publications because of post hoc filters, though six of seven papers stated that “all adverse events were recorded.”For one trial, we identified an additional 1,318 adverse events that were not listed or mentioned in the CSR itself but could be identified through manually counting individual adverse events reported in an appendix. We discovered that the majority of patients had multiple episodes of the same adverse event that were only counted once, though this was not described in the CSRs. We also discovered that participants treated with orlistat experienced twice as many days with adverse events as participants treated with placebo (22.7 d versus 14.9 d, p-value < 0.0001, Student’s t test). Furthermore, compared with the placebo group, adverse events in the orlistat group were more severe. None of this was stated in the CSR or in the published paper.Our analysis was restricted to one drug tested in the mid-1990s; our results might therefore not be applicable for newer drugs.ConclusionsIn the orlistat trials, we identified important disparities in the reporting of adverse events between protocols, clinical study reports, and published papers. Reports of these trials seemed to have systematically understated adverse events. Based on these findings, systematic reviews of drugs might be improved by including protocols and CSRs in addition to published articles.

Highlights

  • Randomised trials generally underreport harms, which according to Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials (CONSORT) is the totality of adverse events [1]

  • We discovered that the majority of patients had multiple episodes of the same adverse event that were only counted once, though this was not described in the clinical study report (CSR)

  • We identified important disparities in the reporting of adverse events between protocols, clinical study reports, and published papers

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Summary

Introduction

Randomised trials generally underreport harms, which according to Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials (CONSORT) is the totality of adverse events [1]. 16% of the trial reports described how adverse events were identified [2], which is problematic because the way the investigator obtains information impacts greatly on the number [3] and reported characteristics of the events [1]. Another survey found that only 18% of all paediatric randomised trials published between 2006 and 2009 reported harms adequately according to the CONSORT guidelines [4]. Industry-sponsored trials are more likely than other trials to conclude that a drug is safe [5]. A similar bias exists in industry-supported reviews of drugs, which are less transparent, have fewer reservations about methodological limitations of the included trials, and have more favourable conclusions than Cochrane reviews of the same drugs [6]

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