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Back to table of contents Previous article Next article Letters to the EditorFull AccessIndustry Funding and Author-Industry Affiliation in Clinical Trials in PsychiatryJOHN H. MONTGOMERY D.O.,JOHN H. MONTGOMERY D.O.Search for more papers by this author,Published Online:1 Jun 2006AboutSectionsPDF/EPUB ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload CitationsTrack Citations ShareShare onFacebookTwitterLinked InEmail To the Editor: The recent study by Roy H. Perlis, M.D., and colleagues (1) addressed an important relationship between author-industry affiliation and study outcomes in clinical trials. The authors examined funding source and author financial conflict of interest in 397 clinical trials published in four psychiatric journals over a 3-year period. The authors defined conflict of interest as “any report of consulting or speaking fees…stock ownership, or employment by the study sponsor” (p. 1957). Their results suggested that author conflict of interest was prevalent and significantly associated with positive trial outcomes in all of the 162 randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled studies. Further, the authors stated that in these studies, “industry support itself was not significantly associated with a positive outcome” (p. 1958). Dr. Perlis and colleagues also noted that, to their knowledge, no previous studies have investigated the “extent and implications” of funding source and author-industry affiliation in psychiatric clinical trials (p. 1957). I would like to bring to the authors’ attention a published study in which my colleagues and I investigated relationships between funding source, study quality, author-industry affiliation, and study outcome in all published randomized, double-blind trials (N=86) of second-generation antipsychotics for the treatment of schizophrenia (2) . We defined a study as having author-industry affiliation if the primary author was listed as an employee or agent of the sponsoring pharmaceutical company. Although our results showed a correlation between author-industry affiliation and study outcome in industry-funded studies, this was not significant. We did find a significant relationship between funding source and study outcome, with industry-funded studies favoring the innovative (sponsored) treatments over standard therapies to a greater degree than nonindustry-funded studies. The relationship between funding source and study outcome was investigated in several other published studies (3 – 8) . Similar to our findings, these studies all demonstrated that industry support was associated with positive study outcome. Findings reported by Dr. Perlis and colleagues are interesting in that industry support itself was not associated with positive study outcomes, yet author conflict of interest was. I invite the authors to comment further on this possible discrepancy. I applaud the call of Dr. Perlis and colleagues for strategies to ensure transparency in the reporting of all clinical trials, regardless of outcome. Hopefully, the psychiatric community will continue to meaningfully address the subject of bias and conflict of interest in industry-supported research.Whitfield, Miss.

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