Abstract

Background A recent review suggested an association between using unpublished scales in clinical trials and finding significant results. Aims To determine whether such an association existed in schizophrenia trials. Method Three hundred trials were randomly selected from the Cochrane Schizophrenia Group's Register. All comparisons between treatment groups and control groups using rating scales were identified. The publication status of each scale was determined and claims of a significant treatment effect were recorded. Results Trials were more likely to report that a treatment was superior to control when an unpublished scale was used to make the comparison (relative risk 1.37 (95% C11.12–1.68)). This effect increased when a ‘gold-standard’ definition of treatment superiority was applied (RR 1.94 (95% C11.35–2.79)). In non-pharmacological trials, one-third of ‘gold-standard’ claims of treatment superiority would not have been made if published scales had been used. Conclusions Unpublished scales are a source of bias in schizophrenia trials.

Keywords

Schizophrenia (object-oriented programming)Rating scaleClinical trialMedicineBrief Psychiatric Rating ScaleGold standard (test)Meta-analysisTreatment effectRandomized controlled trialPsychiatryClinical psychologyPsychologyPsychosisInternal medicineTraditional medicineDevelopmental psychology

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Publication Info

Year
2000
Type
article
Volume
176
Issue
3
Pages
249-252
Citations
850
Access
Closed

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Max Marshall, Austin Lockwood, Caroline Bradley et al. (2000). Unpublished rating scales: A major source of bias in randomised controlled trials of treatments for schizophrenia. The British Journal of Psychiatry , 176 (3) , 249-252. https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.176.3.249

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DOI
10.1192/bjp.176.3.249