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P.013 Conflicts of interest in neurosurgical research - comparing voluntary physician disclosure to mandatory company data

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 June 2016

PJ McDonald
Affiliation:
(Vancouver)
ER Shon
Affiliation:
(Winnipeg)
AV Kulkarni
Affiliation:
(Toronto)
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Abstract

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Background: Industry involvement in neurosurgical research is common, creating financial conflicts of interest (COIs). Most journals require voluntary disclosure of financial COIs. In 2013, the Sunshine Act (SA) was passed in the US, mandating industry disclosure of all payments to physicians. The accuracy of voluntary disclosure can now be determined by comparing voluntary author disclosure with industry data. Methods: We reviewed disclosure statements and calculated rates of voluntary disclosure in major neurosurgical journals before (2011) and after (2013) the Sunshine Act to determine if voluntary disclosure increased after its implementation. We then determined the accuracy of voluntary disclosure in 2013, comparing voluntary disclosure with industry disclosure on the Open Payments Database (OPD). Mean, median and range of industry payments to neurosurgeons were calculated Results: Voluntary disclosure significantly increased in JNS-Spine only (10.7% to 35.4%,p<0.001) after implementation of the SA. The average rate of non-disclosure in all journals studied was 38.3% (Range 33.8%-42.2%)

$32,598,522.97 of industry payments were provided to 656 authors in the five-month period studied (Average $49,692.87/author) Conclusions: Voluntary COI disclosure in JNS- Spine increased after implementation of the Sunshine Act. Industry payments to physicians publishing in neurosurgery journals are common and rates of non-disclosure of COIs are high. The ethical implications of COIs and non-disclosure are discussed.

Type
Poster Presentations
Copyright
Copyright © The Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences Inc. 2016