DOI: https://doi.org/10.20529/IJME.2011.074
The past two decades have seen the emergence of third world countries as important sites for drug trials and related clinical research sponsored by the pharmaceutical industry. As the authors of the report under review have noted, “fast recruitment of trial participants, presence of a broad spectrum of diseases, availability of human resources and technical skills, different ethnic responses to drugs and the availability of treatment naïve population” are powerful drivers of this phenomenon. In addition to such off-shoring, the authors have also drawn attention to outsourcing of trials to clinical research organisations (CROs). Considering the potential for abuse of rights and ethical deviations, such a study of this phenomenon was a pressing need.
The research questions the authors have raised are:
The authors’ expectations at the initiation of this study were that:
The study involved a preliminary literature review, country-level studies in Argentina, Brazil, India and Peru, and interviews with clinical trial experts and pharmaceutical companies. Not surprisingly, they report that the realisation of the research ambition proved much harder than anticipated because of the “extreme lack of transparency of CROs in particular and the pharmaceutical industry in general” – leading to delivery of “diverse and not necessarily comparable information”. In other words, both CROs and pharmaceutical companies were not forthcoming with quality information.
The authors report on whether or not their expectations at the initiation could be conclusively confirmed:
The authors have not been able to establish the extent of shift of responsibility from sponsor to CRO – for oversight and liabilities when there is an agreement to outsource. They were not privy to these agreements. As reported elsewhere (1) 1, these agreements are not submitted to ethics committees or regulators; therefore, enforcement of this liability is a major issue.
The authors concede that the research throws up more questions than have been answered. Lack of investigative authority has forced them to depend on interviews rather than on documents. This is a major drawback. Pharmaceutical majors Bristol Myers Squibb, Eli Lilly, Merck/MSD, Pfizer-Wyeth and Roche did not participate at all. Janssen and Sanofi-Aventis only submitted written statements in response to questions. Abbot, AstraZeneca, GSK and Novartis gave complete interviews on the telephone or by email.
The report with seven chapters has been finalised after five phases of activity:
Phase 1: preliminary, exploratory study; phase 2: country-level studies; phase 3: analysis and integration of country studies phase 4: interviews with pharmaceutical companies; phase 5: review by partners and companies.
The greatest attraction of this report is its lucidity. The conclusions are predictable, if a trifle disappointing. Despite the handicaps of the study, the authors identified the following as measures to be taken for protection of participants’ rights:
That would be a good way to go.