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Pandemic claims new victims: Prestigiou­s medical journals

TWO STUDY RETRACTION­S HAVE LEFT RESEARCHER­S WONDERING IF PEER REVIEW PROCESS IS BROKEN

- BY RONI CARYN RABIN The problem with trust is that it’s too easy to lose and too hard to get back. These are big blunders.” Dr. Jerome Kassirer | Former editor-in-chief, New England Journal of Medicine

One study promised that popular bloodpress­ure drugs were safe for people infected with the coronaviru­s. Another paper warned that anti-malaria drugs endorsed by President Donald Trump actually were dangerous to these patients.

The studies, published in the New England Journal of Medicine

and The Lancet, were retracted shortly after publicatio­n, following an outcry from researcher­s who saw obvious flaws.

The hasty retraction­s, on the same day this month, have alarmed scientists worldwide who fear that the rush for research on the coronaviru­s has overwhelme­d the peer review process and opened the door to fraud, threatenin­g the credibilit­y of respected medical journals just when they are needed most.

Peer review is supposed to safeguard the quality of scientific research. When a journal receives a manuscript, the editors ask three or more experts in the field for comments. The reviewers’ written assessment­s may force revisions in a paper or prompt the journal to reject the work altogether. The system, widely adopted by medical journals in the middle of the 20th century, undergirds scientific discourse around the world.

“The problem with trust is that it’s too easy to lose and too hard to get back,” said Dr. Jerome Kassirer, a former editor-in-chief of the New England Journal of Medicine, which published one of the retracted papers in early May. “These are big blunders.”

If outside scientists detected problems that weren’t identified by the peer reviewers, then the journals failed, he said. Like hundreds of other researcher­s, Kassirer called on the editors to publish full explanatio­ns of what happened.

Review process

In interviews with The New York Times, Dr. Richard Horton, the editor-in-chief of The Lancet, and Dr. Eric Rubin, editorin-chief of the NEJM, said that the studies should never have appeared in their journals but insisted that the review process was still working.

“We shouldn’t have published this,” Rubin said of the study appearing in the NEJM. “We should have had reviewers who would recognise the problem.”

Horton called the paper retracted by his journal a “fabricatio­n” and “a monumental fraud.” But peer review was never intended to detect outright deceit, he said, and anyone who thinks otherwise has “a fundamenta­l misunderst­anding of what peer review is.”

“If you have an author who deliberate­ly tries to mislead, it’s surprising­ly easy for them to do so,” he said.

In addition, the editors said, there is an urgent need to rapidly publish new findings to improve treatments for desperatel­y ill coronaviru­s patients. Since the pandemic began, The Lancet is receiving three times the usual number of papers for considerat­ion, Horton said. And the NEJM has fielded as many as 200 submission­s in a day, including essays, according to Rubin. “I’m an infectious disease doctor, I treat Covid-19 patients,” Rubin said. “I’ve been in the hospital recently treating patients, and we have no idea what to do. I’m the primary driver at the journal of saying, ‘We have to get data out there that people can use.’”

“We are very careful,” he added. “At our editorial meetings, this comes up almost every day. ‘If we publish this, will it hurt people?’ That’s our biggest concern.”

Impact factor

The NEJM and The Lancet are among the oldest, most respected and most widely read medical journals in the world.

They were establishe­d in 1821 and 1823 and are ranked often first and second among general-interest medical journals by their “impact factor,” the frequency with which their studies are cited in other research.

A report in one of these journals can have immediate repercussi­ons both for patients and for research.

After The Lancet’s initial publicatio­n of the study concluding that the anti-malarial drugs chloroquin­e and hydroxychl­oroquine endangered the lives of coronaviru­s patients, the World Health Organisati­on and other groups halted clinical trials of the drugs while safety reviews were conducted.

The reputation of these journals rests in large part on vigorous peer review. But the process is opaque and fallible: Journals generally do not disclose who reviewed a study, what they found, how long it took or even when a manuscript was submitted. Horton and Rubin declined to provide those details regarding the retracted studies, as well.

Critics have long worried that the safeguards are cracking, and have called on medical journals to operate with greater transparen­cy.

Discredite­d research

“We are in the midst of a pandemic, and science is moving really fast, so there are extenuatin­g circumstan­ces here,” said Dr. Ivan Oransky, co-founder of Retraction Watch, which tracks discredite­d research.

“But peer review fails more often than anyone admits,” he said. “We should be surprised it catches anything at all, the way it’s set up.”

Journals used to take many months, or even a full year, to scrutinise and edit a complicate­d study, a process that included several weeks for outside experts to peer review the research.

Now peer review may be condensed to as little as 48 hours; some studies deemed of vital importance to patients may be published online within 20 days of submission.

“There is always a tension between getting it fast and getting it right,” said Dr. Marcia Angell, another former editorin-chief of the NEJM. “I always favoured getting it right. But in the current pandemic, that balance may have shifted too far toward getting it fast.”

Both retracted studies were led by Dr. Mandeep R. Mehra, a widely published and highly regarded professor of medicine at Harvard, and the medical director of the Heart and Vascular

Centre at Brigham and Women’s Hospital.

In a statement last week, Mehra apologised for the retraction­s, which he attributed to an eagerness to publish helpful informatio­n during the pandemic. He stopped short of calling them fraud, saying only that the data could not be verified by independen­t auditors.

Independen­t audits

The data in both studies were produced by a small company outside Chicago called Surgispher­e, run by another of the papers’ authors, Dr. Sapan Desai. In an interview with The New York Times in May, Desai vigorously defended his work and the authentici­ty of his data registry, which he said included patient records from 1,200 hospitals and other health facilities around the world.

But when the NEJM and The Lancet demanded independen­t audits, he refused, citing confidenti­ality agreements with client hospitals. Following the retraction­s, Desai has declined further comment.

“This got as much, if not more, review and editing than a standard regular track manuscript,” Rubin, the editor-in-chief of the NEJM, said of the heart study, which was based on a smaller set of Surgispher­e data that appeared in the medical journal. “We didn’t cut corners. We just didn’t ask the right people.”

He said the journal should have tapped outside experts familiar with big hospital data sets to be involved in the peer review. And The Lancet, Horton said, will demand independen­t verificati­on of the quality of a database when reviewing studies from now on.

But editors and reviewers do know who the study authors are, critics note, and that may bias them toward a positive review even when data are suspect. Mehra is well respected in scientific circles.

Politicisa­tion of pandemic

The politicisa­tion of the pandemic also may have played a role in The Lancet’s publicatio­n, critics charge. Trump has vigorously endorsed hydroxychl­oroquine as both preventive and curative treatment for Covid-19. The study’s conclusion­s at first appeared to rebuke the president.

Horton is no fan of Trump, calling his decision to withhold funding from the WHO in April “a crime against humanity.”

“Every scientist, every health worker, every citizen must resist and rebel against this appalling betrayal of global solidarity,” Horton wrote on Twitter.

On Friday, he said he chose to publish the hydroxychl­oroquine study only because it showed an immediate danger in widespread use of the drug. The clinical trials should not have been halted, he added.

“Because of the political context, and people using this drug on the basis of minimal evidence in its favour, it seemed very important to publish work that at least gave some sense of whether the drug was safe or not,” he said.

“That was the motivation behind the publicatio­n.”

Journal editors are caught in a Catch-22 of sorts, said Dr. Hassan Murad, of the Mayo Clinic, who works with a federal project to review medical evidence. “You want to push the informatio­n out quickly to practition­ers. It’s a pandemic, it’s an urgent situation.”

“At the same time, you want quality control.”

The NEJM and The Lancet are among the oldest, most respected and most widely read medical journals in the world. They are ranked often first and second among general-interest medical journals by their “impact factor,” the frequency with which their studies are cited in other research.

 ?? AFP ?? Health profession­als check a patient infected with Covid-19 at the Doctor Ernesto Che Guevara Public Hospital in Marica, Brazil.
AFP Health profession­als check a patient infected with Covid-19 at the Doctor Ernesto Che Guevara Public Hospital in Marica, Brazil.
 ?? New York Times ?? A few of the scientific journals in New York.
New York Times A few of the scientific journals in New York.
 ?? Reuters ?? Hydroxychl­oroquine, pushed by Trump and others as a possible treatment to people infected with the Covid-19, is displayed by a pharmacist at the Rock Canyon Pharmacy in Provo, Utah, US,
Reuters Hydroxychl­oroquine, pushed by Trump and others as a possible treatment to people infected with the Covid-19, is displayed by a pharmacist at the Rock Canyon Pharmacy in Provo, Utah, US,
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