articleJAMAFeb 6, 2002Closed access

Relationships Between Authors of Clinical Practice Guidelines and the Pharmaceutical Industry

Mount Sinai Hospital

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Objective

To quantify the extent and nature of interactions between authors of CPGs and the pharmaceutical industry. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Cross-sectional survey of 192 authors of 44 CPGs endorsed by North American and European societies on common adult diseases published between 1991 and July 1999. One hundred authors (52%) provided usable responses representing 37 of 44 different CPGs that we identified. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Nature and extent of interactions of authors with drug manufacturers; disclosure of relationships in published guidelines; prior discussion among authors regarding relationships; beliefs regarding whether authors' own relationships or those of their colleagues influenced treatment recommendations in guidelines.

Results

Eighty-seven percent of authors had some form of interaction with the pharmaceutical industry. Fifty-eight percent had received financial support to perform research and 38% had served as employees or consultants for a pharmaceutical company. On average, CPG authors interacted with 10.5 different companies. Overall, an average of 81% (95% confidence interval, 70%-92%) of authors per CPG had interactions. Similarly, all of the CPGs for 7 of the 10 diseases included in our study had at least 1 author who had some interaction. Fifty-nine percent had relationships with companies whose drugs were considered in the guideline they authored, and of these authors, 96% had relationships that predated the guideline creation process. Fifty-five percent of respondents indicated that the guideline process with which they were involved had no formal process for declaring these relationships. In published versions of the CPGs, specific declarations regarding the personal financial interactions of individual authors with the pharmaceutical industry were made in only 2 cases. Seven percent thought that their own relationships with the pharmaceutical industry influenced the recommendations and 19% thought that their coauthors' recommendations were influenced by their relationships.

Citation impact

648
total citations
FWCI
42.31
Percentile
100%
References
61
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Medicine
  • Pharmaceutical industry
  • Guideline
  • Clinical Practice
  • Family medicine
  • Conflict of interest
  • Alternative medicine
  • Pharmacology
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