AUTH/3070/9/18 - Director v Janssen

Clinical trial disclosure

  • Received
    12 September 2018
  • Case number
    AUTH/3070/9/18
  • Applicable Code year
    2016
  • Completed
    15 May 2019
  • No breach Clause(s)
  • Additional sanctions
  • Appeal
    No appeal
  • Review
    To be published in the Code of Practice Review

Case Summary

A study published online in the British Medical Journal (12 September 2018) was entitled ‘Compliance with requirement to report results on the EU Clinical Trials Register: cohort study and web resource’ (Goldacre et al 2018).

The study objectives included assessing compliance rates with the European Commission’s requirement that all trials on the EU Clinical Trials Register (EUCTR) posted results to the registry within 12 months of completion (final compliance date 21 December 2016). The study objectives also included identifying features associated with non-compliance, ranking sponsors by compliance and building a tool for live ongoing audit of compliance. The published paper listed the trial sponsors with the highest proportion of trials reported and the trial sponsors with the highest proportion of trials unreported. The results were that of 7,274 trials where results were due, 49.5% (95% confidence interval 48.4% to 50.7%) reported results.

Goldacre et al stated that the European Commission (EC) Guideline required the results of all trials to be reported in structured form on to the register itself. It was possible that some trials that did not report results to EUCTR reported results elsewhere eg in a conference presentation, an academic journal article, as part of a meta-analysis after data were requested by systematic reviewers, or in the grey literature. Such publications did not meet the reporting requirements of the EC Guideline and were therefore outside the scope of the study.

Goldacre et al listed sponsors with more than 50 trials on the EUCTR and did not mention products or specific clinical trials. Goldacre et al gave details of disclosure of clinical trial results for each sponsor.

The Director decided that the Goldacre et al article was such that she had received information from which it appeared that Johnson & Johnson might have breached the Code and decided in accordance with Paragraph 5.1 of the Constitution and Procedure to take the matter up as a complaint.

The detailed response from Janssen, the member company of the ABPI for the Janssen Pharmaceutical Companies of Johnson & Johnson, is given below.

General detailed comments from the Panel are given below.

The Panel noted the data in Goldacre et al in that the results for two of Johnson & Johnson’s due trials had not been reported on EUCTR; the disclosure percentage was 98.1%.

The Panel noted Janssen’s submission that the two clinical trials at issue were: EudraCT Number 2009-011250-17 and EudraCT Number 2011-000653-23. The Panel further noted Janssen’s submission that Goldacre et al used EUCTR data to assess disclosure compliance. In relation to the two trials at issue, EUCTR was not fully accurate, as the relevant National Competent Authority (NCA) had not, as requested by Janssen, updated the trials’ status to reflect that there were no trial results as no patients had been recruited.

The Panel noted Janssen’s submission that although in trial 2009-011250-17 the UK had trial sites, the trial was cancelled on 14 July 2010 with no patients screened or enrolled; there were no clinical trial results to report. The Panel therefore ruled no breaches of and the Code including no breach of Clause 2 in relation to this trial.

The Panel noted Janssen’s submission that trial 2011-000653-23 was cancelled on 19 December 2013 with no patients screened or enrolled; there were therefore no results to report. The Panel noted Janssen’s submission that the trial had no UK company involvement and no UK centres, investigators or patients and considered that as there was no UK involvement in the study the matter did not come within the scope of the UK Code. The Panel therefore ruled no breach of the Code.