TY - JOUR
T1 - Conflicts of interest in clinical practice
T2 - lessons learned from cardiovascular medicine
AU - Ronco, Daniele
AU - Albuquerque, Arthur M
AU - Marin-Cuartas, Mateo
AU - Anselmi, Amedeo
AU - Sádaba, Rafael
AU - Barili, Fabio
AU - Uva, Miguel Sousa
AU - Brophy, James M
AU - Quintana, Eduard
AU - Musumeci, Francesco
AU - Tomasi, Jacques
AU - Verhoye, Jean-Philippe
AU - Mandrola, John
AU - Dayan, Victor
AU - Myers, Patrick O
AU - Villareal, Ovidio A Garcia
AU - Kaul, Sanjay
AU - Rodriguez-Roda Stuart, Jorge
AU - Milojevic, Milan
AU - Gomes, Walter J
AU - Parolari, Alessandro
AU - Almeida, Rui M S
PY - 2024/9/2
Y1 - 2024/9/2
N2 - Cardiovascular diseases represent a major burden worldwide, and clinical trials are critical to define treatment improvements. Since various conflicts of interest (COIs) may influence trials at multiple levels, cardiovascular research represents a paradigmatic example to analyze their effects and manage them effectively to re-establish the centrality of evidence-based medicine.Despite the manifest role of industry, COIs may differently affect both sponsored and non-sponsored studies in many ways. COIs influence may start from the research question, data collection and adjudication, up to result reporting, including the spin phenomenon. Outcomes and endpoints (especially composite) choice and definitions also represent potential sources for COIs interference. Since large randomized controlled trials significantly influence international guidelines, thus impacting also clinical practice, their critical assessment for COIs is mandatory. Despite specific protocols aimed to mitigate COI influence, even scientific societies and guideline panels may not be totally free from COIs, negatively affecting their accountability and trustworthiness.Shared rules, awareness of COI mechanisms and transparency with external data access may help promoting evidence-based research and mitigate COIs impact. Managing COIs effectively should preserve public trust in the cardiovascular profession without compromising the positive relationships between investigators and industry.
AB - Cardiovascular diseases represent a major burden worldwide, and clinical trials are critical to define treatment improvements. Since various conflicts of interest (COIs) may influence trials at multiple levels, cardiovascular research represents a paradigmatic example to analyze their effects and manage them effectively to re-establish the centrality of evidence-based medicine.Despite the manifest role of industry, COIs may differently affect both sponsored and non-sponsored studies in many ways. COIs influence may start from the research question, data collection and adjudication, up to result reporting, including the spin phenomenon. Outcomes and endpoints (especially composite) choice and definitions also represent potential sources for COIs interference. Since large randomized controlled trials significantly influence international guidelines, thus impacting also clinical practice, their critical assessment for COIs is mandatory. Despite specific protocols aimed to mitigate COI influence, even scientific societies and guideline panels may not be totally free from COIs, negatively affecting their accountability and trustworthiness.Shared rules, awareness of COI mechanisms and transparency with external data access may help promoting evidence-based research and mitigate COIs impact. Managing COIs effectively should preserve public trust in the cardiovascular profession without compromising the positive relationships between investigators and industry.
KW - Aortic valve replacement
KW - Cardiovascular research
KW - Conflicts of interest
KW - Coronary revascularization
KW - Randomized controlled trials
KW - Transcatheter aortic valve implantation
KW - Conflict of Interest
KW - Humans
KW - Cardiovascular Diseases/therapy
KW - Cardiology/ethics
KW - Biomedical Research/ethics
KW - Evidence-Based Medicine
KW - Research Support as Topic/ethics
U2 - 10.1093/ejcts/ezae296
DO - 10.1093/ejcts/ezae296
M3 - Article
SN - 1010-7940
VL - 66
JO - European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery
JF - European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery
IS - 3
M1 - ezae296
ER -