Covid-19 studies based on flawed Surgisphere data force medical journals to review processes
Some of the world’s leading medical journals are
reviewing their processes after they were forced to retract studies based on
flawed data.
None of the peer reviewers who examined a
questionable study on the impact of blood pressure medications on Covid-19 saw
the raw data behind the findings before it was approved for publication in
world-renowned medical journal, the New England Journal of Medicine.
The study was based on a massive dataset supposedly
gathered from hospitals worldwide by a US company called Surgisphere, but a
Guardian investigation has since revealed the database to be seriously flawed.
The revelation, combined with concerns highlighted by scientists worldwide
about the data, prompted the journal to retract the study. The Lancet, another leading
medical journal, also published a study based on the Surgisphere database.
The Lancet study found the anti-malarial drug
hydroxychloroquine was associated with a higher risk of death and heart
complications in Covid-19 patients, a finding which prompted the World Health
Organisation and research institutions worldwide to place studies of the drug
on hold. That study was also revealed to be problematic and was retracted by
the Lancet earlier in June. However, there is still no strong evidence that
hydroxychloroquine is effective in the prevention and treatment of Covid-19,
and health authorities have warned against the drug being given to Covid-19
patients outside clinical trials given its toxicity profile and side effects.
The publication and retraction of the studies in
renowned medical journals has reignited concerns in the research community
about the rigour of peer review. Peer review is where scientists evaluate the
quality of other scientists’ work to identify any issues before it is published
in industry journals. This process is designed to prevent weak studies and
their findings from being published by journals, which is important because
what appears in leading medical journals often changes health and medical
guidelines for patients.
Many peer-reviewed journals require that their
authors be prepared to share their raw, unprocessed data with peer reviewers,
and also to make the de-identified raw data available to scientists more
generally so that it can be both used and scrutinised. The International
Committee of Medical Journal Editors statement on accountability says: “As
editors, we strongly oppose contractual agreements that deny investigators the
right to examine the data independently.”
The Lancet and New England Journal of Medicine are
said to have among the most stringent peer review processes of the scientific
journals.
A spokeswoman for the New England Journal of
Medicine told the Guardian that the Surgisphere paper was reviewed by four
external experts and a statistical reviewer. But none of these experts saw the
raw data from Surgisphere, she said.
Both the Lancet and the New England Journal of
Medicine subscribe to the voluntary editorial recommendations of the
International Committee of Medical Journal Editors. Those guidelines state: “As
part of peer review, editors are encouraged to review research protocols, plans
for statistical analysis if separate from the protocol, and/or contracts
associated with project-specific studies. Editors should encourage authors to
make such documents publicly available at the time of or after publication,
before accepting such studies for publication.”
The New England Journal of Medicine spokeswoman said
following the Surgisphere paper retraction earlier in June, the journal
completed an internal review of the editorial process. She said the Surgisphere
study “received excellent peer reviews, and the reviewers raised relevant
questions about the work”.
“We learned two things from this review that will
result in changes to our process,” she said.
“We have limited experience with reviewing or
publishing studies like this one, which used a large database based on
electronic medical records. The reviewers and editors asked the authors
questions about the data sources and data validity. The editors accepted the
authors’ responses, rather than asking for help from reviewers with expertise
in this type of data. In the future, our review process of big data research
will include reviewers with such specific expertise.”
The journal is now in the process of assessing
existing guidelines for the conduct and reporting of research on big data, and
is also developing internal policies for reviewing and reporting these
articles.
The Lancet did not provide as much detail when asked
the same questions by the Guardian about how the Surgisphere hydroxychloroquine
study passed peer review, and whether the incident would trigger a review of
the process. It was the Lancet that under the same editor, Richard Horton,
published a fraudulent study linking the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine
with autism. In 2010, 12 years after the paper was first published, the Lancet
retracted the paper. The author of the paper, Dr Andrew Wakefield, was also
banned from practising medicine in the UK due to his fraudulent work.
The latest retraction from the journal has left
researchers and the public questioning whether the peer review process and
editorial policies are rigorous enough.
A spokeswoman for the Lancet said all research
articles undergo independent, external peer review, including statistical
review. She said the Surgisphere paper was peer reviewed and edited according
to The Lancet’s “usual editorial procedures”. “We are reviewing our
requirements for data sharing and validation among authors, and data sharing following
publication,” she said.
The Surgisphere website and Twitter account have
both been deleted since the retractions on 5 June.




