The role and impact of research agendas on the comparative-effectiveness research among antihyperlipidemics

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Abstract

Although it is well established that funding source influences the publication of clinical trials, relatively little is known about how funding influences trial design. We examined a public trial registry to determine how funding source shapes trial design among trials involving antihyperlipidemics. We used an automated process to identify and analyze 809 trials from a set of 72,564. Three networks representing industry-, collaboratively, and non-industry-funded trials were constructed. Each network comprised 18 drugs as nodes connected according to the number of comparisons made between them. The results indicated that industry-funded trials were more likely to compare across drugs and examine dyslipidemia as a condition, and less likely to register safety outcomes. The source of funding for clinical trials had a measurable effect on trial design, which helps quantify differences in research agendas. Improved monitoring of current clinical trials may be used to more closely align research agendas to clinical needs. © 2012 American Society for Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics.

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Dunn, A. G., Bourgeois, F. T., Murthy, S., Mandl, K. D., Day, R. O., & Coiera, E. (2012). The role and impact of research agendas on the comparative-effectiveness research among antihyperlipidemics. Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics, 91(4), 685–691. https://doi.org/10.1038/clpt.2011.279

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