Objectives: To assess how genetics and -omics information is used in the most cited recent clinical trials and to evaluate industry involvement and transparency patterns. Study Design and Setting: This is a meta-research evaluation using a previously constructed database of the 600 most cited clinical trials published from 2019 to 2022. Trials that utilized genetic or -omics characterization of participants in the trial design, analysis, and results were considered eligible. Results: 132 (22%) trials used genetic or -omics information, predominantly for detection of cancer mutations (n = 101). Utilization included eligibility criteria (n = 59), subgroup analysis (n = 82), and stratification factor in randomization (n = 14). Authors addressed the relevance in the conclusions in 82 studies (62%). 102 studies (77%) provided data availability statements and six had data already available. Most studies had industry funding (n = 111 [84.0%]). Oncology trials were more likely to be industry-funded (90.1% vs 64.5%, P = .001), to have industry-affiliated analysts (43.6% vs 22.6%, P = .036), and to favor industry-sponsored interventions (83.2% vs 58.1% P = .004). When compared to other trials, genetic and -omics trials were more likely to be funded by industry (84% vs 63.9%, P < .001) and tended to be less likely to have full protocols (P = .018) and statistical plans (P = .04) available. Conclusion: Our study highlights the current underutilization of genetic and -omics technologies beyond testing for cancer mutations. Industry involvement in these trials appears to be more substantial and transparency is more limited, raising concerns about potential bias.
High-impact trials with genetic and -omics information focus on cancer mutations, are industry-funded, and less transparent / Russo, Luigi; Siena, Leonardo Maria; Farina, Sara; Pastorino, Roberta; Boccia, Stefania; Ioannidis, John P. A.. - In: JOURNAL OF CLINICAL EPIDEMIOLOGY. - ISSN 0895-4356. - 180:(2025), pp. 1-10. [10.1016/j.jclinepi.2025.111676]
High-impact trials with genetic and -omics information focus on cancer mutations, are industry-funded, and less transparent
Leonardo Maria Siena.Secondo
;
2025
Abstract
Objectives: To assess how genetics and -omics information is used in the most cited recent clinical trials and to evaluate industry involvement and transparency patterns. Study Design and Setting: This is a meta-research evaluation using a previously constructed database of the 600 most cited clinical trials published from 2019 to 2022. Trials that utilized genetic or -omics characterization of participants in the trial design, analysis, and results were considered eligible. Results: 132 (22%) trials used genetic or -omics information, predominantly for detection of cancer mutations (n = 101). Utilization included eligibility criteria (n = 59), subgroup analysis (n = 82), and stratification factor in randomization (n = 14). Authors addressed the relevance in the conclusions in 82 studies (62%). 102 studies (77%) provided data availability statements and six had data already available. Most studies had industry funding (n = 111 [84.0%]). Oncology trials were more likely to be industry-funded (90.1% vs 64.5%, P = .001), to have industry-affiliated analysts (43.6% vs 22.6%, P = .036), and to favor industry-sponsored interventions (83.2% vs 58.1% P = .004). When compared to other trials, genetic and -omics trials were more likely to be funded by industry (84% vs 63.9%, P < .001) and tended to be less likely to have full protocols (P = .018) and statistical plans (P = .04) available. Conclusion: Our study highlights the current underutilization of genetic and -omics technologies beyond testing for cancer mutations. Industry involvement in these trials appears to be more substantial and transparency is more limited, raising concerns about potential bias.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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