Availability and Use of Shared Data From Cardiometabolic Clinical Trials

Circulation. 2018 Feb 27;137(9):938-947. doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.117.031883. Epub 2017 Nov 13.

Abstract

Background: Sharing of patient-level clinical trial data has been widely endorsed. Little is known about how extensively these data have been used for cardiometabolic diseases. We sought to evaluate the availability and use of shared data from cardiometabolic clinical trials.

Methods: We extracted data from ClinicalStudyDataRequest.com, a large, multisponsor data-sharing platform hosting individual patient-level data from completed studies sponsored by 13 pharmaceutical companies.

Results: From January 2013 to May 2017, the platform had data from 3374 clinical trials, of which 537 (16%) evaluated cardiometabolic therapeutics (phase 1, 36%; phase 2, 17%; phase 2/3, 1%; phase 3, 42%; phase 4, 4%). They covered 74 therapies and 398 925 patients. Diabetes mellitus (60%) and hypertension (15%) were the most common study topics. Median time from study completion to data availability was 79 months. As of May 2017, ClinicalStudyDataRequest.com had received 318 submitted proposals, of which 163 had signed data-sharing agreements. Thirty of these proposals were related to cardiometabolic therapies and requested data from 79 unique studies (15% of all trials, 29% of phase 3/4 trials). Most (96%) data requesters of cardiometabolic clinical trial data were from academic centers in North America and Western Europe, and half the proposals were unfunded. Most proposals were for secondary hypothesis-generating questions, with only 1 proposed reanalysis of the original study primary hypothesis. To date, 3 peer-reviewed articles have been published after a median of 19 months (9-32 months) from the data-sharing agreement.

Conclusions: Despite availability of data from >500 cardiometabolic trials in a multisponsor data-sharing platform, only 15% of these trials and 29% of phase 3/4 trials have been accessed by investigators thus far, and a negligible minority of analyses have reached publication.

Keywords: clinical trial; information dissemination; outcome and process assessment (health care); research design.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Access to Information
  • Cardiovascular Diseases / metabolism*
  • Clinical Trials as Topic
  • Europe
  • Heart / physiology*
  • Humans
  • Information Dissemination / methods*
  • Myocardium / metabolism*
  • North America
  • Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care
  • Research Support as Topic