Study finds six in 10 US physician contributors had financial ties to industry. Findings raise questions about editorial independence
A study from the Centre’s co-Founder, Lisa Cosgrove, reported that sixty percent of US physicians serving as panel and task force members for the American Psychiatric Association’s official manual of psychiatric disorders received payments from industry totalling $14.24m, finds a study published by The BMJ.
Because of the enormous influence of diagnostic and treatment guidelines, the researchers say their findings “raise questions about the editorial independence of this diagnostic manual.”
Often referred to as the ‘bible’ of psychiatric disorders, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, fifth edition, text revision (DSM-5-TR) is the latest edition of the guide that doctors use to diagnose and treat patients. It is thus critical that authors of this psychiatric taxonomy should be free of industry ties.
But until the development of Open Payments (a database of financial relationships between companies and physicians), it wasn’t possible to determine the amount of monies received by authors of diagnostic and clinical practice guidelines.
To address this, researchers used data from Open Payments to assess the extent and types of financial ties to industry of panel and task force members of the DSM-5-TR.
Their analysis included 92 physicians based in the US who served as members of either a panel (86) or task force (6) on the DSM-5-TR from 2016-19, the time during which work was initiated and completed for the 2022 text revision.
Of these 92 individuals, 55 (60%) received payments from industry. Collectively, these panel members received a total of $14.24m (£11.21m; €12.96m). Only two of the six task force members had any payments reported in Open Payments, totaling $196.02 and $792.67 for 2016-19.
The most common types of payment were for food and beverages (91%), followed by travel (69%) and consulting (69%).
The greatest proportion of compensation by category of payment was for research funding (70%) which the authors point out was excluded from the American Psychiatric Association’s disclosure policy for the previous edition (DSM-5).
They highlight some study limitations, such as not including payments to physicians based outside the US or non-physician prescribers and acknowledge that amounts listed in the database may be imprecise.
Nevertheless, they say this study “provides novel data about the appreciable conflicts of interest in the DSM-5-TR and extends past research on this topic.”
To ensure unbiased, evidence based mental health practice, there should be a rebuttable presumption of prohibiting financial conflicts of interest among the panel and task force members of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, they write.
When no independent individuals with the requisite expertise are available, they suggest that those with associations to industry could consult to the panels, but they would not have decision making authority on revisions or inclusion of new disorders.
“As researchers, clinicians, policy makers, and leaders in evidence based medicine have argued, guideline writers should be free of financial relationships with industry, especially those writers who are responsible for such an influential manual on psychiatric taxonomy,” they conclude.
The full article can be found here.