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Financial conflicts of interest among US physician authors of 2020 clinical practice guidelines: a cross-sectional study

Maryam Mooghali, Laura Glick, Reshma Ramachandran, Joseph S. Ross

2023BMJ Open31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the prevalence and accuracy of industry-related financial conflict of interest (COI) disclosures among US physician guideline authors. DESIGN: Cross-sectional study. SETTING: Clinical practice guidelines published by the Council of Medical Specialty Societies in 2020. PARTICIPANTS: US physician guideline authors. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Financial COI disclosures, both self-reported and determined using Open Payments data. RESULTS: Among 270 US physician authors of 20 clinical practice guidelines, 101 (37.4%) disclosed industry-related financial COIs, whereas 199 (73.7%) were found to have received payments from industry when accounting for payments disclosed through Open Payments. The median payments received by authors during the 3-year period was US$27 451 (IQR, US$1385-US$254 677). Comparing authors' self-disclosures with Open Payments, 72 (26.7%) of the authors accurately disclosed their financial COIs, including 68 (25.2%) accurately disclosing no financial COIs and 4 (1.5%) accurately disclosing a financial COI. In contrast, 101 (37.4%) disclosed no financial COIs and were found to have received payments from industry, 23 (8.5%) disclosed a financial COI but had under-reported payments received from industry, 14 (5.2%) disclosed a financial COI but had over-reported payments received from industry and 60 (22.2%) disclosed a financial COI but were found to have both under-reported and over-reported payments received from industry. We found that inaccurate COI disclosure was more frequent among professors compared with non-professors (81.9% vs 63.5%; p<0.001) and among males compared with females (77.7% vs 64.8%; p=0.02). The accuracy of disclosures also varied among medical professional societies (p<0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Financial relationships with industry are common among US physician authors of clinical practice guidelines and are often not accurately disclosed. To ensure high-quality guidelines and unbiased recommendations, more effort is needed to minimise existing COIs and improve disclosure accuracy among panel members.

Topics & Concepts

PaymentConflict of interestMedicineSpecialtyGuidelineClinical PracticeFinanceCross-sectional studyAccountingFamily medicineBusinessPathologyPharmaceutical industry and healthcareHealthcare cost, quality, practicesSocial Media in Health Education
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