AUTH/2669/11/13 - Member of the public v Shire

Clinical Trial Disclosure (Resolor)

  • Received
    18 November 2013
  • Case number
    AUTH/2669/11/13
  • Applicable Code year
    2012
  • Completed
    20 March 2014
  • No breach Clause(s)
    2, 9.1 and 21.3
  • Additional sanctions
  • Appeal
    No appeal
  • Review
    August 2014

Case Summary

​An anonymous, contactable member of the public complained about the information published as 'Clinical Trial Transparency: an assessment of the disclosure results of company-sponsored trials associated with new medicines approved recently in Europe'. The study was published in Current Medical Research & Opinion (CMRO) on 11 November 2013. The study authors were Dr B Rawal, Research, Medical and Innovation Director at the ABPI and B R Deane, a freelance consultant in pharmaceutical marketing and communications. Publication support for the study was funded by the ABPI.

The study surveyed various publicly available information sources for clinical trial registration and disclosure of results searched from 27 December 2012 to 31 January 2013. It covered 53 new medicines (except vaccines and fixed dose combinations) approved for marketing by 34 companies by the European Medicines Agency (EMA) in 2009, 2010 and 2011. It included all completed company-sponsored clinical trials conducted in patients and recorded on a clinical trial registry and/or included in a European Public Assessment Report (EPAR). The CMRO publication did not include the specific data for each product. This was available via a website link and was referred to by the complainant. The study did not aim to assess the content of disclosure against any specific requirements.

The complainant stated that the study detailed a number of companies which had not disclosed their clinical trial results in line with the ABPI for licensed products. The complainant provided a link to relevant information which included the published study plus detailed information for each product that was assessed.

The summary output for each medicine set out the sources for all trials found, irrespective of sponsor and an analysis of publication disclosure in the form of a table which gave details for the studies for Resolor (prucalopride).

The detailed response from Shire is given below.

General detailed comments from the Panel are given below.

The Panel noted the CMRO publication in that five evaluable studies had not been disclosed in the timeframe. The disclosure percentage was 77%. Four studies had not been disclosed giving a disclosure percentage at 31 January 2013 of trials completed before the end of January 2012 of 82%.

The Panel noted that Resolor was first approved in October 2009 and commercially available in January 2010. This meant that the 2008 Code and Joint Position 2005 were relevant. Resolor trials completed before 6 January 2005 did not need to be disclosed under the Joint Position 2005.

The Panel noted that four studies completed in the late 1990s and given that Resolor was first approved and commercially available in January 2010, there was no requirement to disclose the results of these trials. The Panel ruled no breach of the 2008 Code.

The Panel noted Shire's submission that one study was a Phase I study on healthy volunteers and it did not need to be disclosed. The data had been published in February 2012. The relevant Code was the 2008 Code and hence the Joint Position 2005. This did not require disclosure of exploratory trials unless they were of significant medical importance and might have an impact on marketed product's labelling. The Panel was unsure whether the results were of significant medical importance. The complainant had not provided any details in this regard. The Panel considered that publication of such data was preferable, however on the information before it there appeared to be no need to disclose the trial results under the 2008 Code and so it ruled no breach of the Code including Clause 2.