Abstract

BackgroundThe International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) Recommendations set ethical and editorial standards for article publication in most leading medical journals. Here, I examine the strengths and weaknesses of the Recommendations in the prevention of commercial bias in industry-financed journal literature, on three levels – scholarly discourse, article content, and article attribution.DiscussionWith respect to overall discourse, the most important measures in the ICMJE Recommendations are for enforcing clinical trial registration and controlling duplicate publication. With respect to article content, the ICMJE promotes stringent author accountability and adherence to established reporting standards. However, the ICMJE accepts the use of commercial editorial teams to produce manuscripts, which is a potential source of bias, and accepts private company ownership and analysis of clinical trial data. New ICMJE guidance on data sharing will address but not eliminate problems of commercial data access. With respect to attribution, the Recommendations oppose guest authorship and encourage clear documentation of author contributions. However, they exclude writers from coauthorship; provide no specific advice on the attribution of commercial literature, for instance with respect to company authorship, author sequence or prominent commercial labeling; and endorse the use of fine print and euphemism. The ICMJE requires detailed author interest disclosures, but overlooks the interests of non-authors and companies, and does not recommend that interests most salient to the publication are highlighted. Together, these weaknesses facilitate “advocacy”-based marketing, in which literature planned, financed and produced by companies is fronted by academics, enabling commercial messages to be presented to customers by their respected clinical peers rather than companies themselves.ConclusionsThe ICMJE Recommendations set important research and reporting standards, without which commercial bias would likely be a significantly greater problem than it is today. However, they also support practices of commercial data control, content development and attribution that run counter to science’s values of openness, objectivity and truthfulness. These weaknesses could be addressed with appropriate modifications to the Recommendations. The ICMJE should also disclose its own commercial interests and funding – not least because publishing organizations that finance it and pay the salaries of some member editors derive substantial revenues from industry.

Highlights

  • The International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) Recommendations set ethical and editorial standards for article publication in most leading medical journals

  • Good industry science should be welcomed into scholarly literature, but commercial bias may occur on several levels (Table 1)

  • Its Recommendations – previously known as the Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts (URM) [19] – have gradually evolved since their debut in 1978, and currently set standards on authorship, conflict of interest, submission and review, publishing and editorial issues, and manuscript preparation. They have been adopted by nearly 2000 journals including most leading titles, ICMJE membership is limited to a handful of top journals, some more minor and nonEnglish language journals, the US National Library of Medicine and the World Association of Medical Editors

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Summary

Discussion

Several measures have been introduced, including limited measures on prior and repeat publication, practices which might be used by marketing to increase visibility of a commercial product, and most importantly, trial registration. Since 2005, the ICMJE has insisted that trials are registered at or before patient enrollment begins, at a major public registry; this measure was designed to address the problem of selective reporting of trials [27]. IIA1 Contributor listings Bookkeeping of author accountability. II Acknowledgements Bookkeeping of non-author contributions, A3 accountability. II B Conflict of interest Comprehensive net for author financial interests.

Conclusions
Background
B Access to data
Reporting A2 guidelines
Role of “contracted A3d organization”
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