16 April 2015
(Reuters) - The World Health Organization called on Tuesday for the release of clinical trial results for all drugs, vaccines and medical devices - whatever the result - in the latest salvo against the withholding of data.
Marie-Paule Kieny, assistant director general at the United Nations health agency, said failure to disclose trial results led to misinformation and could result in skewed priorities for research and public health interventions.
"It creates indirect costs for public and private entities, including patients themselves, who pay for sub-optimal or harmful treatments," she said.
In recent years, the pharmaceuticals industry has gone a long way to commit to disclosing results for new clinical studies, but critics argue it is still not doing enough to ensure doctors have access to all drug data.
The WHO also wants disclosure of older unreported clinical trials, the results of which may still have an important bearing on medical practice and scientific research today.
Ben Goldacre, a British doctor and author who has led a campaign urging full disclosure, said the WHO statement was "powerful and welcome" but required practical implementation, for example through routine audits to identify completed but unreported trials.
Print14 March 2024
26 February 2024
NovaMedica team wishes you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!
26 December 2023
Big Pharma’s ROI for drug R&D saw 'welcome' rebound in 2023: report
25 April 2024
Orphan drug market to reach $270B by 2028 : Evaluate
25 April 2024
Russian drug for the treatment of viral hepatitis will be exempt from duty in Mongolia
24 April 2024
PM Mishustin: “We need to increase the production of vital and essential drugs in Russia”
24 April 2024