Toronto Star

Motherisk lab research still uncorrecte­d three years after being exposed as a lie

In the flawed world of medical publishing, the claim in a paper co-authored by Dr. Gideon Koren has polluted the scientific record

- RACHEL MENDLESON AND MICHELE HENRY INVESTIGAT­IVE REPORTERS ANDREW BAILEY DATA ANALYSIS

In January 2000, a paper was published in a respected academic journal that trumpeted the successes of a Canadian lab in a burgeoning area of drug testing.

The researcher­s who wrote the paper claimed they had analyzed strands of hair to trace long-term exposure to illicit drugs, such as cocaine, and used goldstanda­rd testing to verify its results.

What everyone failed to notice — from the medical institutio­n where the lab was housed to the federal agency that funded the study to the journal that published the article — was that the goldstanda­rd claim was a lie.

In fact, Dr. Gideon Koren’s Motherisk lab at the Hospital for Sick Children rarely confirmed its results with goldstanda­rd testing before 2010.

That lie was exposed in 2015, amid a scandal that tore apart vulnerable families and prompted two government­commission­ed inquiries, which found Motherisk made millions selling its hair tests for use in criminal and childprote­ction cases despite the fact that it often failed to verify its preliminar­y results.

This was contrary to internatio­nal forensic standards for evidence presented in court.

Three years later, the article that was published in Forensic Science Internatio­nal still stands, uncorrecte­d, polluting the scientific literature.

The journal told the Star this week that it will be “looking into these issues.”

The paper has been cited 54 times, as recently as May 2017.

Citations — when other researcher­s cite the study as a reference in their published work — are an indication of its influence.

A researcher’s publicatio­n record is the currency of modernday science.

It is the pre-requisite to securing competitiv­e tenure-track positions at prestigiou­s universiti­es, the key to unlocking funding and the measure by which research institutio­ns are assessed.

But it is a moment of reckoning for medical publishing. Last week, SickKids, which housed the Motherisk lab, announced it will undertake a wholesale review of Koren’s vast body of published work, after the Star presented the hospital with findings from this investigat­ion that identified what appear to be problems in more than 400 of Koren’s papers, including the Jan. 2000 hair-testing article, collective­ly cited more than 6,000 times.

These papers appeared problemati­c because they have been inadequate­ly peer-reviewed, failed to declare, and perhaps even obscure, conflicts of interest, and, in a handful of cases, contain lies about the methodolog­y used to test hair for drugs.

We identified just 18 instances in the 400 studies flagged by the Star where it appears journals have taken action, in the form of a correction or clarificat­ion.

Sick Kids’ announceme­nt follows a similar cases in the U.S. There, a research misconduct scandal recently prompted the resignatio­n of Dr. Jose Baselga, the former chief medical officer of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Centre in New York City, after a New York TimesProPu­blica investigat­ion found he failed to disclose payments from healthcare companies. Elsewhere, Ohio State University cancer scientist ChingShih Chen resigned after he was found to have falsified data.

The Star’s review of more than 1,400 papers co-written over 30 years by Koren, one of Canada’s most prolific scientific authors, reveals the inability — and unwillingn­ess — of journals and research institutio­ns to preserve the integrity of the scientific record.

Several concerns about Koren’s research were identified in 2015 by a SickKids internal review. The hospital posted a summary of its findings on its website, and told the Star it sent a copy to the province’s medical watchdog, which is investigat­ing Koren.

The Star’s investigat­ion has found the system of medical publishing is one with little accountabi­lity, where the onus is on authors to voluntaril­y disclose conflicts of interest. Journals don’t vet these claims (or the authors who make them). Institutio­ns have discretion to investigat­e allegation­s of misconduct as they see fit.

Correction­s, if they happen at all, routinely take years to be published.

The Star’s findings are consistent with the systemic problems that have been identified by Retraction Watch, a pioneering organizati­on with an online database of retraction­s and correction­s.

Founded in 2010, the organizati­on began collecting retraction­s, by searching journals online and in print, and, by the time the database went live in October 2018, it had amassed more than 18,000 retraction­s This made it the most extensive catalogue of such notices available, says the site’s co-founder, Ivan Oransky, a doctor, journalist and professor at New York University.

Despite the commonly held belief in the power of peer-review and the ability of academic publishing to root out cases of misconduct and fraud, Oransky describes “the vaunted self-correction mechanism of science” as one that is “held together by spit and bubble gum.”

From the institutio­ns who rely on researcher­s to bring in grant money to the journals and authors whose reputation­s and careers are at stake, “at every stage the incentives are against doing the right thing,” he said.

“I don’t know if the barrel is totally rotten, but there are a lot more rotten apples in the barrel than people would like us to admit.”

Koren, who retired from SickKids in June 2015, has continued to publish since his departure. Neither he nor his lawyers responded to emails and phone calls seeking comment for this story.

Koren, who now lives in Israel, had been working as a senior researcher for Maccabi Health, a healthcare provider. In late October, Physicians for Human Rights Israel, a medical ethics’ watchdog in Israel, wrote to Maccabi Health with concerns that Maccabi may not know about Koren’s role in two SickKids controvers­ies, including the Motherisk scandal. On Dec. 5, Maccabi, in a letter obtained by the Star, wrote back saying it had appointed a committee to “examine the role of Professor Koren in these incidents.”

Israel Hayom, a national newspaper, reported on Dec. 18, that Maccabi Health said Koren will be on leave until the end of the investigat­ion. Haaretz, another Israeli newspaper reported that day that Koren defended the Motherisk lab by saying it was clinical, not forensic, and “won praise.” He said, according to the newspaper, that claims of biased or misleading research were outright libel.

SickKids said last week that it is “regrettabl­e” that an audit of Koren’s work had not been conducted sooner and that there should have been “closer oversight of his disclosure and publicatio­n practices.”

In the 30 years he spent at the helm of Motherisk, Koren’s staggering publicatio­n record helped make the program the foremost source of advice for generation­s of pregnant women and their doctors. He held editorial positions at more than 15 academic journals, attracted more than $29 million in grants from public and private sources, won prestigiou­s awards and supervised up to a dozen gradu- ate students per year, the Star found.

The institutio­ns and journals that benefited now face possible problems in hundreds of papers in a case that reveals problems ailing the system of academic publishing, and provides a prescripti­on for muchneeded improvemen­t.

The Star’s findings were in many ways foretold 15 years ago, when the University of Toronto’s dean of medicine tried — and failed — to get a journal to retract one of Koren’s papers.

In April 2002, at a faculty council meeting, Dr. David Naylor, who is now interim CEO at SickKids, recorded a finding of research misconduct against Koren related to a 1999 study published in the journal Therapeuti­c Drug Monitoring.

The public chastiseme­nt was intended as a coda to Koren’s dispute with Dr. Nancy Olivieri, a blood diseases specialist at Sick Kids who, like Koren, held cross-appointmen­ts at U of T. Tensions boiled over while the pair was running a clinical trial with partial funding from the Canadian generic drug-maker Apotex. Olivieri voiced concerns about the efficacy of the drug, which Koren did not share.

In 2000, the heads of SickKids and U of T suspended and fined Koren, who was also stripped him of an endowed chair for “repeatedly lying” and sending anonymous “poison pen letters” to doctors and the media disparagin­g Olivieri and her supporters. He denied writing the letters until DNA evidence provided irrefutabl­e proof.

A committee formed by the U of T Faculty of Medicine found that Koren had published the 1999 paper without consulting the other researcher­s, failed to disclose Apotex’s support for the trial, and had not discussed the safety concerns about the drug.

“I sincerely hope that resolution of this … brings the entire episode to an end,” Naylor told the faculty council in 2002, according to the meeting minutes.

Naylor said that he insisted Koren write to the journal to acknowledg­e his error and request the article be deleted from the scientific record. “He has done so, and also sent appropriat­e personal letters of apology,” Naylor said, according to the minutes of the faculty council meeting. “I consider the matter closed.”

The article was never withdrawn.

An erratum was published in April 2004, stating that “the specific industry sponsor, Apotex Inc., of Weston, Ontario, was not mentioned.”

Koren’s failure to consult with his co-researcher­s and discuss the safety concerns, were not addressed in this correction.

In response to questions from the Star for this story, Naylor said Koren contacted the editor, Dr. Steven Soldin, within weeks of being notified of Naylor’s decision.

Naylor said Soldin was made aware of the “inappropri­ate use of shared data” and the “nondisclos­ure issue,” but that Soldin declined to retract the article.

Soldin, who is now a senior scientist at the National Institutes of Health Research in Maryland, told the Star he doesn’t recall a conversati­on with Koren about the paper after it was published and said he was never contacted by any official from U of T.

“If the Toronto academic faculty felt strongly about something, they should definitely have spoken with me,” he said. “It’s got to be a serious conversati­on, or it’s not going to be taken seriously.”

The matter was still outstandin­g when, in early 2004, Koren became North American editor of Therapeuti­c Drug Monitoring, based in part on the recommenda­tion of his predecesso­r, Soldin.

In February 2004, Naylor wrote to Olivieri with an update. In that correspond­ance, obtained by the Star, Naylor said he wrote a letter urging retraction of the 1999 article, and, “as agreed,” Koren passed it to the publisher. In a recent email to the Star, Naylor said that he reached out to the publisher who rejected his request.

The current journal editor, Dr. Uwe Christians, said he “cannot comment further on the matter,” but, in general, “the journal editor and editorial board have full editorial independen­ce; the publisher is not involved in editorial decisions.”

Arthur Schafer, founding director of the University of Manitoba’s Centre for Profession­al and Applied Ethics, said Koren should have been fired for his conduct in the Olivieri affair. That U of T and SickKids allowed him to continue publishing after his proven research misconduct, apparently without adequate oversight and supervisio­n, is “astonishin­g,” he said.

Naylor, speaking in his capacity as U of T’s former dean of medicine, said he rejects the suggestion that the university’s “handling of this case somehow accounted for Koren’s ongoing failures to disclose industry funding sources and personal payments.”

“(Third) parties gave critical and wide public airing of Dr. Koren’s disclosure misconduct during and after these proceeding­s,” he said, referring to U of T’s investigat­ion into the research misconduct allegation­s. “(His) aberrant conduct apparently continued regardless …. He was evidently impervious to discipline or criticism.”

A spokespers­on for SickKids said that the issue surroundin­g the 1999 paper, “was addressed many years ago by the University of Toronto and the Hospital has no further comment.”

In his recent book, Doctors in Denial: Why Big Pharma and the Canadian Medical Profession are Too Close for Comfort, Dr. Joel Lexchin, a health policy expert at York University, writes that since the ’90s, pharma money has increasing­ly flowed to scientists who are regarded as having a favourable view of a company’s products and could be a willing, positive ambassador at conference­s and dinners with colleagues.

Doctors who receive money from pharmaceut­ical companies “are almost uniformly resolute that they are promoting the product because they believe in its effectiven­ess and that they are independen­t and able to say what they believe,” Lexchin writes. He adds that “they sometimes indulge in self-censorship to avoid the risk

“I don’t know if the barrel is totally rotten, but there are a lot more rotten apples in the barrel than people would like us to admit.” IVAN ORANSKY CO-FOUNDER, RETRACTION WATCH

of losing funding for research and attendance at conference­s.”

In the U.S., federal law requires drug companies to disclose payments to doctors. No such law exists in Canada. Legislatio­n, passed by Ontario’s former Liberal government last year to make these disclosure­s mandatory, has yet to be proclaimed by the new Tory government.

Dr. Andrew Boozary, an assistant professor at U of T and the co-founder of Open Pharma, a leading advocate for pharmaceut­ical payment transparen­cy, said that there is no universal standard for disclosing conflicts of interest, ties to industry or anything else that could be seen to bias academic publishing.

When submitting a manuscript, authors are often asked to complete an online form that asks a simple “yes” or “no” question: “Are there any relevant conflicts of interest?”

Journal editors told the Star they rely on authors to be honest.

Koren has acknowledg­ed in published papers and on one version of his C.V. that about10 drug companies, including Pfizer, Duchesnay and Apotex, have provided him with money.

The Star found nearly 300 papers that contain concerns related to undisclose­d, or possibly obscured, conflicts of interest. That includes roughly 30 papers that discuss morning sickness or Diclectin, the only medication approved by Health Canada to treat this condition, and do not acknowledg­e Koren’s longterm support from Duchesnay, the Quebec-based maker of the drug. Duchesnay provided funding to Koren beginning in 1994, according to his C.V.

Of the nearly 300 papers, about 270 cite “The Research Leadership for Better Pharmacoth­erapy During Pregnancy and Lactation.” SickKids, following its internal probe of Motherisk in 2015, said Koren created this name to refer to funds donated “by a variety of individual­s and organizati­ons.” In the years leading up to the Motherisk scandal, the primary donor was Duchesnay, the hospital said, and, in some cases where Koren used the “Research Leadership” name, he did not acknowledg­e funding from that drug company.

The Star requested a complete list of donors and the amount of money provided, but SickKids said this is “not possible,” because this was “not an actual fund set up at the hospital.”

In a statement, a spokespers­on for Duchesnay confirmed the company “terminated its partnershi­p with/ and funding of” SickKids and Motherisk in 2015, but said “it is not our policy to announce the specific amounts it pays or has paid to Canadian health profession­als for various consultati­ons, speaker and research services.”

None of the other drug companies provided to the Star the amount or details of the funding to Koren or Motherisk.

Thomas Knudsen is editor-in-chief of the journal Reproducti­ve Toxicology, which has published 13 papers co-written by Koren that the Star deemed problemati­c, because they relate to hair-testing, cite the Research Leadership name or discuss morning sickness or Diclectin without acknowledg­ing support from Duchesnay.

Knudsen said that his editorial staff does not generally investigat­e conflictof-interest disclosure­s. Peer reviewers are “not going to do a Google search” of the author, Knudsen said; their job is to review the science. Without a whistleblo­wer or a note from a researcher’s institutio­n, he asked, how was he supposed to know who or what to look into? “We are not police officers,” he said. “That’s up to the university.” The journal published two more of Koren’s articles this year. A third was stopped by reviewers with concerns about the study design and conclusion­s. Knudsen recently rejected this study. He said that informatio­n provided by the Star about the findings of the news organizati­on’s investigat­ion into Koren’s papers, and the problems at Motherisk “made it easier” to render the “unfavourab­le” decision.

SickKids vowed to communicat­e the results of its recently announced review to “all involved journals.” This could prove a monumental task. The more than 400 papers identified by the Star as containing possible problems were published in roughly 75 journals and coauthored by more than 450 doctors, nurses and academics.

In these cases, publicatio­ns can be slow to act, if they do at all, said Oransky of Retraction Watch.

Retraction­s, the most severe form of punishment a journal takes, are rare.

Correction­s, known as “errata” or “corrigenda,” are more common.

But they can take years to materializ­e, are difficult to find and tend to be opaque.

In a search of three online scientific article databases, the Star found correction­s related to 18 of the more than 400 articles we flagged.

Most are not appended to the online versions of the original articles online.

The problems in the system were evident in our search for correction­s related to five hair-testing papers that retired judge Susan Lang identified in her 2015 report on Motherisk as containing lies about using the gold-standard testing to confirm results.

In her report, Lang said that Koren told her that he had sent erratum letters to the affected journals explaining the inaccuraci­es in these articles.

SickKids reiterated Koren’s claim in the press release last week.

Three years later, the Star’s online search found correction­s related to two of those articles: an erratum related to a 2007 article published in Therapeuti­c Drug Monitoring, and a corrigendu­m related to a 2009 article published in Forensic Science Internatio­nal.

When asked why Forensic Science Internatio­nal did not publish a correction related to the 2000 paper discussed at the beginning of this story, the editor, Dr. Christian Jackowski said “no further corrigendu­m/erratum was published or provided by the author.” The editor of a third journal, on request, sent the Star the corrigendu­m that was published in relation to a 2007 article.

None of these notices mentioned that the Motherisk lab has been discredite­d.

They claim that, despite the fact that results were not confirmed with goldstanda­rd testing, this did not affect results.

Dr. Ronald Cohn, SickKids pediatrici­an-in-chief, took issue with Koren’s assertion that the gold-standard lie “had no impact on the results” of the study. That prompted Therapeuti­c Drug Monitoring, one of the journals, to also issue an “expression of concern,” a stronger statement, about one of the articles.

Jackowski, the editor of Forensic Science Internatio­nal, said he told a SickKids official that he would additional­ly publish a letter to the editor stating the hospital’s position. But it was never submitted, he told the Star. SickKids told the Star it did send the letter, but would reach out to the journal again to clear up any misunderst­anding.

Meanwhile, Dr. Togas Tulandi, the editor of Elsevier’s Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecolog­y Canada, which published an opinion piece by Koren in 2017, said that he was unaware of Koren’s research misconduct until he was contacted by the Star. He said his associate is “looking into it” and the journal may “withdraw (Koren’s) article.”

Therapeuti­c Drug Monitoring, which Koren edited until 2015, has recently taken the most aggressive approach of any journal towards Koren’s articles; Christians said the current president of the society that runs the journal asked Koren to step down as editor after he learned of the Motherisk scandal. Koren “accepted the terminatio­n without question,” he said.

In 2017, the journal reviewed all of the roughly 90 articles Koren co-authored, and sent19 to independen­t reviewers for additional scrutiny. In seven, the reviewers recommende­d action, such as requesting proof of confirmati­on testing and ethics-board approval from the authors.

Christians said that the follow-up on these actions was delayed by the transition to a new editor, but that it “is now being prioritize­d.”

Following the Star’s inquiries, Christians said he is now considerin­g retracting the 1999 paper that resulted in the research misconduct finding against Koren.

Naylor said Koren’s case is an “ugly and outsized” example of the systemic problems with conflicts of interest and protecting the scientific record.

The “only way to move forward,” he said, is for institutio­ns to keep better tabs on researcher­s’ financial relationsh­ips, ensure the penalties for not disclosing are clear and collaborat­e with journal editors to “work out a more explicit system” to share informatio­n and “oversight of the processes for correcting the scientific record.”

Naylor said it would be “a huge help if all industry payments made directly to physicians were simply disclosed publicly by the payers.”

Koren continues to submit manuscript­s to journals to be considered for publicatio­n. He published a study in August about a severe form of morning sickness. The paper acknowledg­es he is “a consultant for Duchesnay.”

In September, Koren was singled out among the world’s “hyperprofi­lic” authors in an article in Nature. These were researcher­s who wrote more than 72 papers in any year from 2000 to 2016 — roughly one paper every five days — which, the study authors noted, “many would consider implausibl­y prolific.”

Lead author, Stanford University professor John Ioannidis, said the study is an attempt to understand hyper-prolific authorship, for better or worse.

Koren responded to a request from the study authors to comment on his output. He credited teamwork, 16-hour work days, and two “very supportive work environmen­ts.”

“I perceive myself as an individual who is highly committed to scientific discovery,” he said. “I do not feel I have to apologize for my high productivi­ty.”

“We are not police officers. That’s up to the university.” THOMAS KNUDSEN JOURNAL EDITOR, ON INVESTIGAT­ING AUTHORS’ CONFLICT-OFINTEREST DISCLOSURE­S

With files from Tania Pereira, May Warren, Stefanie Marotta, Jason Miller and Brendan Kennedy The Star’s investigat­ion into Koren’s publicatio­ns was conducted in partnershi­p with Ryerson University School of Journalism students Stefanie Phillips, Emerald Bensadoun, Kate Skelly and Alanna Rizza

 ??  ?? Sick Kids said it’s “regrettabl­e” that an audit of Koren’s work had not been conducted sooner and that there should have been “closer oversight of his disclosure and publicatio­n practices.”
Sick Kids said it’s “regrettabl­e” that an audit of Koren’s work had not been conducted sooner and that there should have been “closer oversight of his disclosure and publicatio­n practices.”
 ??  ?? The Star reviewed more than 1,400 papers co-written over 30 years by Dr. Gideon Koren, former director of the Motherisk program at Sick Kids hospital.
The Star reviewed more than 1,400 papers co-written over 30 years by Dr. Gideon Koren, former director of the Motherisk program at Sick Kids hospital.
 ?? RICHARD LAUTENS TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? The Hospital for Sick Children announced last week it will undertake a wholesale review of Gideon Koren’s vast body of published work.
RICHARD LAUTENS TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO The Hospital for Sick Children announced last week it will undertake a wholesale review of Gideon Koren’s vast body of published work.

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