NEW YORK (Reuters Health) Jun 13 - In this week's issue of The New England
Journal of Medicine, the editors announced a change in journal policy that
will allow experts to comment on the effectiveness of a drug or device,
even when they have a financial tie to the maker of the product under
review.
According to Journal Editor-in-Chief Dr. Jeffrey M. Drazen and
Executive Editor Dr. Gregory D. Curfman, the new rules do not apply to
original articles. In those cases, the journal discloses the study's
funding and the financial interests of the researchers, and that won't
change.
But they are changing rules applying to authors of review articles and
editorials.
Drs. Drazen and Curfman believe previous rules barring experts with any
financial ties to private companies linked to drugs reviewed in journal
articles were too restrictive. "For example, in the past two years we have
been able to solicit and publish only one Drug Therapy article on a novel
form of treatment," they write, adding that while the avoidance of
conflict of interest is important, "our silence does not serve our
readers."
The NEJM editorial board "concluded that our ability to provide
comprehensive, up-to-date information, especially on recent advances in
therapeutics, has been constrained" by a policy which stated that the
authors of review articles and editorials "will not have any financial
interest in a company (or its competitor) that makes a product discussed
in the article."
The policy has now been changed to read that the authors of these types
of articles will not have any "significant" monetary ties to private
companies that might stand to gain from a review article in the Journal.
"The addition of the word 'significant' acknowledges that not all
financial associations are the same," Drs. Drazen and Curfman write. For
example, experts who simply have invested in a mutual fund that might
include a drug company linked to the product under review will now be
allowed to write a review article on that drug for the Journal.
And the editors base their definition of "significant financial
interest" on guidelines issued by the US National Institutes of Health and
the Association of American Medical Colleges, which set the amount at
$10,000 in any given year.
Experts who stand to gain larger sums--either through stock, stock
options or patents--will still be barred from writing review articles for
the journal. Also barred are researchers who get a major portion of their
funding from companies that stand to profit.
"We regard these revisions as guidelines, not rigid rules," the editors
add, stressing that authors for review articles will be selected on a
case-by-case basis. But a loosening selection criteria will help "bring
the best scientific and medical information to the Journal."
N Engl J Med 2002;346:1901-1902.