Medical council to investigate alleged research fraud
Owen Dyer, London
The General Medical Council this week began an investigation into alleged
research fraud relating to a study published inthe BMJ five
years ago. The principal author, Dr Mohammed NaeemShaukat, then a
British Heart Foundation research fellow, is accusedof serious
professional misconduct in handling research data dishonestlyand
misleading his coauthors and the BMJ.
The article presented research into cardiac outcomes among patients at
Leicester Royal Infirmary and concluded that patientsof Indian
origin fared dramatically worse after a first heartattack (BMJ
1997; 314:639-42)[Abstract/Full
Text].
In January 1998, 10 months after the article was published, the BMJ
received a letter signed by the article's six authors,including Dr
Shaukat, which stated: "Further examination of thedata on which this
paper was based, in the context of anotherproject, has revealed
important inaccuracies such that the conclusionsof the paper cannot
be sustained. We therefore wish to withdrawit unreservedly." The
letter was dulypublished.
Leicester University Medical School, which employed all of the authors, began
an investigation but kept its findings fromthe BMJ, instead
reporting Dr Shaukat to theGMC.
The dean, Professor Ian Lauder, has told the BMJ:"I wouldn't
want to comment while the case is actually under way, but Ican
confirm that the complaint came from this office. We contactedthe
GMC about a yearago."
Of the authors, only Dr Shaukat is accused of impropriety. One of the authors
has since died, and two are still at LeicesterMedical School. The
analysis found that incorrect recording ofdeaths led to a consistent
overestimation of mortality among patientsfrom South
Asia.
Dr Shaukat, who is no longer employed by Leicester University, admits failing
to consult with the other authors after publicationwhen discrpancies
came to light, but denies the charges of dishonestyand breach of
scientific integrity. He also denies that he wasin sole control of
the original studydatabase.
The BMJ's editor, Richard Smith, said: "I understand that the whole
matter was effectively sub judice while Leicester investigatedit.
It's a pity this has taken so long. Since 1997 we haven'tbeen able
to explain to our readers what was wrong with the researchin thisarticle."
Professor Lauder said: "The complexity of a case like this is incredible. The
amount of data that must be reviewed comparesto a major fraudcase."
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