Abstract

Is it possible to conduct impartial clinical trials in a world full of digital networking tools that patients can use to coordinate themselves and act against research protocols? This paper builds on an ethnography of PatientsLikeMe, a company running an internet social media network where patients with different conditions share their clinical data with standardized questionnaires. The company faced a serious dilemma in 2011 when some ALS patients, members of the site, started sharing data about a phase II clinical trial of an experimental drug (NP001) in which some of them were participating, to anticipate the experiment’s outcomes and understand each one’s allocation over trial arms. In parallel, some other patients were using the site and other web tools to coordinate and run their own replication of the trial with homebrew mixes of industrial grade chemicals. PatientsLikeMe researchers reflected on their position as networks managers and eventually decided to use the collected data to develop their own analysis of the efficacy of the original compound, and of the homebrewers’ compound. They presented the NP001 events as a case in point for articulating a new social contract for clinical research. This paper analyses these events, first, by understanding the clinical trial as an experiment organization form that can succeed only as long as its protocol can be enforced; second, we observe how web networks make it dramatically easier for the trial protocol to be violated; finally, we point out how a potentially dangerous confluence of interests over web networks could incubate developments that disrupt the status quo without creating a robust and safe alternative for experimentation. We conclude by warning about the interests of the pharmaceutical industry in exploiting patients’ methodological requests to its own advantage.

Highlights

  • Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a very rare, lethal and debilitating neurological disease for which no cure has yet been discovered

  • Is it possible to conduct impartial clinical trials in a world full of digital networking tools that patients can use to coordinate themselves and act against research protocols? This paper builds on an ethnography of PatientsLikeMe, a company running an internet social media network where patients with different conditions share their clinical data with standardized questionnaires

  • If patients find out that they are receiving their favourite drug in a medical randomized clinical trial (RCT), they may generate a placebo effect, making the drug look more effective than it is;4 if they find out the opposite, they may just drop out of the trial, diminishing its statistical power to detect the treatment effect reliably

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Summary

Introduction

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a very rare, lethal and debilitating neurological disease for which no cure has yet been discovered. This study examines what happened when some of the participants in the ACP and in the Neuraltus trial used the PLM platform to coordinate with other patients and share their outcomes This initiative took patient-led experimentation to a new level of complexity In the Neuraltus trial, those participants who compared their outcomes on PLM had a bigger chance of guessing correctly which treatment they were receiving Drawing on both fieldwork conducted at PLM at the time of the disclosure of the Neuraltus trial data on the platform and on secondary reporting, we want to reflect on how patient activity coordinated over digital platforms can challenge current drug testing standards and regimes of medical experimentation. We conclude our warning by pointing at the bigger picture in which it should be framed, highlighting the links between this scenario and other recent examples where internet networks were weaponised to orchestrate, manipulate and capture the initiatives of active citizens, and undermine the construction of facts

Preferences in clinical trial designs
Methodology and stage setting
Persevering’s initiative at PLM
The future of clinical trials
Digital technology and contract research organization
Digital technology and informal activism
Findings
Digital technology and pharmaceutical regulation
Full Text
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