IOM urges sweeping changes to clinical trial data sharing
The Institute of Medicine (IOM) has released a report calling for widespread sharing of clinical trial data.
Clinical trials generate a vast amount of data, but much of it is never made available to researchers. IOM assembled a committee to examine a political framework for responsible data sharing to advance medical science.
In its report, IOM outlined four recommendations to normalize the sharing of such data:
- Clinical trial sharing should be expected and required as part of clinical trial protocols.
- The full analyzable dataset of a clinical trial should be published within 18 months of a study if it is not submitted as part of regulatory approval of a project; within 30 days of a product’s regulatory approval; and within 18 months after a product is abandoned.
- Strategies should be in place promoting data sharing and related technology platforms while increasing financial assistance.
- The study’s sponsors, which include several pharmaceutical companies like AbbVie, Bayer, GlaxoSmithKline and Sanofi-Aventis, should lead efforts to implement the recommendations.
“Although there are technical hurdles, we need to change how we think about data. We need to view it as a community resource, much like a shared park, rather than as personal property,” said Jeffrey Drazen, MD, IOM committee member, in a related editorial that accompanied the report.
Access the report.