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Dear Klim,
In discussing this important issue, have we taken into account this 2010 PLOS article?
The Haunting of Medical Journals: How Ghostwriting Sold “HRT”
http://www.plosmedicine.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pmed.1000335
Regards,
Ash
 
 

>________________________________
> From: Trish Groves <[log in to unmask]>
>To: [log in to unmask] 
>Sent: Saturday, 13 October 2012, 18:17
>Subject: Re: effects of HRT on CVD events RCT
>  
>
>Thanks, Ben 
>Your point's very important, but it's
unusual for a single paper to change practice, and neither the paper nor
the press release suggested that the findings here were sufficiently definitive
to warrant that. 
>
>Here's the BMJ press release, which
we posted alongside the paper: 
>http://www.bmj.com/press-releases/2012/10/10/hrt-taken-10-years-significantly-reduces-risk-heart-failure-and-heart-atta 
>
>I certainly hope that Klim will send
a Rapid Response: we'd be very pleased to post it. And if it's at all reassuring,
I can say (somewhat cryptically) that the reviewers who saw the paper were
the right ones and were fully aware of the relevant evidence base. 
>
>Best wishes 
>Trish 
>
>Dr Trish Groves
>Deputy editor, BMJ
>and Editor-in-chief, BMJ Open 
>
>+44 207 383 6018 
>bmj.com - the open access journal 
>bmjopen.bmj.com 
>BMJ Group: http://group.bmj.com 
>twitter @trished 
>
>
>
>From:      
 "Djulbegovic,
Benjamin" <[log in to unmask]> 
>To:      
 [log in to unmask] 
>Date:      
 13/10/2012 16:25 
>Subject:    
   Re: effects
of HRT on CVD events RCT 
>Sent by:    
   "Evidence
based health (EBH)" <[log in to unmask]> 
>
>
>________________________________
> 
>
>
>Hi Trish, 
>Thanks for this reply. 
>I am aware of logistical
complexities of mandating doing a SR/MA from the trialists. I am also not
sure how well the Lancet policy is enforced- I have certainly seen the
papers in which the authors did perform SR/MA and those where only cursory
reference to a “systematic” review process had been made. 
>  
>However, if the goal of a
RCT is to inform physicians’ decision-making, it is not clear to me how
it is possible to “discuss [the] completed
trial in the light of the totality of existing evidence without doing “your
own systematic review"? After the BMJ published this latest HRT trial,
what should I, as a practitioner do? (Re-)start prescribing HRT (with a
goal to prevent heart disease, osteoporosis, improve life expectancy etc)?
The only way I can really make this decision is to understand the results
of this trial after it was pooled with other similar trials (assessing
bias & getting estimate of the impact of random error, of course, remains
integral part of this process).   
>I am cc my reply to Iain
as it appears that I have misunderstood his writings. 
>Many thanks for willingness
to engage in an open dialogue with the authors and representatives of the
public (which is how I see my role). I hope other editors will follow your
example. 
>Ben 
>Ps re the HRT paper, I do
suggest that you commission a rapid response/review (SR/MA) from Klim or
his colleagues to settle the question.  
>From: Trish Groves [mailto:[log in to unmask]] 
>Sent: Saturday, October 13, 2012 10:31 AM
>To: Djulbegovic, Benjamin; EVIDENCE-BASED-HEALTH
>Subject: Re: effects of HRT on CVD events RCT 
>  
>Hi Ben
>Thanks for the prompt.
>
>This is a good question, but a much misunderstood one.
>
>Doing a systematic review takes expertise that not all triallists have,
and reporting one properly takes a whole paper. 
>
>So insisting on doing and then reporting a new systematic review in the
discussion section of every RCT papers is neither feasible or desirable
- what use is a systematic review that's mentioned in a couple of sentences
and is impossible to evaluate?
>
>If you ask Iain directly (which I've done), he says it's not what he ever
intended.
>He meant that triallists should ensure before writing their protocol, let
alone their paper, that the trial will add to what's known (by searching
properly for relevant systematic reviews) and should discuss their completed
trial in the light of the totality of existing evidence. 
>That's not the same at all as "do your own systematic review."
>
>The Lancet's instructions for authors asks for a section in the discussion
that puts the results into context and says, for RCTs, "authors are
invited [ie not mandated] to either report their own up to date systematic
review or cite a recent systematic review of other trials".  
>Most Lancet authors take the second option, and that's fine.
>
>At the BMJ we ask for a structured discussion in every paper:
>www.bmj.com/about-bmj/resources-authors/article-types/research
>
>This includes a subsection on "strengths and weaknesses in relation
to other studies, discussing important differences in results". 
>
>Every paper also has a box stating what was already known and what the
study adds.
>
>For the record, the Schierbeck et al study you're discussing did that,
citing previous RCTs and meta-analyses.
>
>Anyway, do please bring to bmj.com (via Rapid Responses) the debate that's
taking place on this listserve. We will, of course, ask the authors to
respond in turn.
>
>Best wishes
>Trish
>
>Dr Trish Groves, Deputy editor BMJ, and Editor-in-Chief BMJ Open
>bmj.com
>bmjopen.bmj.com
>Twitter @trished
>
>(By Blackberry: please forgive any typos) 
>
>
>
>________________________________
> 
>  From: "Djulbegovic,
Benjamin" [[log in to unmask]]
> Sent: 13/10/2012 13:48 GMT
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: Re: effects of HRT on CVD events RCT 
>  
>Indeed, Klim 
>So, what happens if the latest study is
pooled with all other (eligible) studies? I believe that some journals
mandate ( Lancet, not sure about BMJ and other journals) placing the findings
of the latest study in the context of the totality of existing evidence.
Iain Chalmers & Mike Clarke ( cc on this reply) have convincingly argued
that all research should start with research synthesis ( systematic review
to justify uncertainties to undertake a new clinical trial) and finish
with systematic review ( placing findings of the study in the context of
all available evidence). If this is not done, (reigniting old) confusion
is bound to happen. 
>  
>Because some of the members of this group
are editors, I want to directly invite them to respond to this challenge:
why their journals have not adopted the Lancet policy of mandating systematic
review from all authors submitting a clinical trial report ( at least RCT)
to their journals? Specifically, it would be good to hear from the BMJ
editors: was this oversight or they do not think such policy should be
put in place?  
>In a new age of transparency and democratization
of scientific discourse, I hope we hear from the editors as this is really
important issue. 
>Thanks  
>Ben 
>  
>
>On Oct 13, 2012, at 4:52 AM, "Klim McPherson" <[log in to unmask]>
wrote: 
>Thanks Anoop, 
>  
>My rapid response: 
>  
>Schierbeck and colleagues
suggested that “initiation of hormone replacement therapy in women early
after menopause significantly reduces the risk of the combined endpoint
of mortality, myocardial infarction, or heart failure” [1]. They invoke
the age hypothesis, which remains one of the abiding critiques of the WHI
study, namely that women well past the menopause in WHI responded differently
to exogenous hormones than do symptomatic menopausal women, with respect
to cardiovascular risk. 
>  
>All such arguments have
perforce to ignore the only double blind placebo controlled studies of
such symptomatic women, a synthesis of which was published in the BMJ [2]
and then the Lancet [3] including unpublished studies (a process resisted
by the manufacturers) and summarised in the BMJ [4].  The evidence
from a synthesis of some 200-efficacy studies submitted for licensing of
HRT products strongly suggests that the risk is the same as found among
older women in WHI as among women with menopausal symptoms. Purveyors of
the age hypothesis need to take on board all of the evidence, especially
from well-controlled RCT’s. 
>  
>Yours, 
>Klim McPherson 
>New College  
>Oxford OX1 3BN 
>  
>References  
>  
>Schierbeck LL, Rejnmark
L, Tofteng CL, Stilgren L, Eiken P, Mosekilde L, Køber L, Jensen JE. Effect
of hormone replacement therapy on cardiovascular events in recently postmenopausal
women: randomised trial. BMJ 2012; 345: e6409. 
>  
>Hemminki E, McPherson K. Impact of postmenopausal
hormone therapy on cardiovascular events and cancer: Pooled data from clinical
trials.  BMJ; 1997; 315:149-153. 
>  
>  
>
>Hemminki, E, McPherson K.  The value
of drug-licensing documents in studying the effect of postmenopausal hormone
therapy on cardiovascular disease.  Lancet, 2000; 355: 566 – 8 
>  
>McPherson K, Hemminki E. Synthesising licensing
data to assess drug safety. BMJ, Feb 2004; 328: 518-520 
>From: Anoop Balachandran <[log in to unmask]>
>Reply-To: Anoop Balachandran <[log in to unmask]>
>Date: Friday, 12 October 2012 13:45
>To: "[log in to unmask]"
<[log in to unmask]>
>Subject: Re: effects of HRT on CVD events RCT 
>  
>My comments: 
>
>1. The sample size is small. In the WHI study, they had 17,000 in one arm
and 10,000 in other arm. So the CI's were very wide.   
>2 No placebo-controlled group.  
>  
>here is a rapid response for that
article in BMJ:   
>  
>Schierbeck and colleagues suggested
that “initiation of hormone replacement therapy in women early after menopause
significantly reduces the risk of the combined endpoint of mortality, myocardial
infarction, or heart failure” [1]. However, after a closer look at their
study, the results do not appear so straightforward. 
>Indeed, after a mean duration
of 10.1 years of randomised treatment in 1006 women, the primary endpoint
occurred in 17 fewer subjects (33 vs 16) in treated group than in control
group. However, women in the control group were 0.47 years (about 5.7 months)
older than those in the treated group [1]. 
>In the cardiovascular secondary
prevention trial Cholesterol and Recurrent Events (CARE) [2], patients
were randomized to 40 mg daily of the cholesterol-lowering drug pravastatin
or placebo. In the 4159 participants, statin therapy was associated with
97 fewer revascularizations [2]. It has been calculated that the average
delay of revascularization was 0.09 years (33 days) over 5 years [3]. Although
it is difficult to make a similar calculation for the study by Schierbeck
and colleagues [1], it seems unlikely that the projected delay on 10 years
of the events defined in the primary endpoint would be longer. In other
words, although the authors adjusted the composite endpoint’s results
for age, the apparent significant beneficial results may have been seriously
flawed. 
>Furthermore, the assumption
that heart protection in fertile women is mediated by premenopausal levels
of female hormones is not consistent with epidemiological findings that
premenopausal hysterectomy essentially cancels the protection, even in
cases with preservation of functioning ovaries [4]. On the contrary, these
data [4] suggest that an intact uterus has an important role in the protection
of premenopausal women, and likely this is related to the beneficial effect
of iron depletion in menstruating women [5] (i.e., the iron hypothesis
suggested by Sullivan more than 30 years ago [6]). 
>If you torture numbers enough
they will say anything you want. 
>Luca Mascitelli, MD
>Comando Brigata alpina “Julia”, Udine 33100, Italy 
>Mark R. Goldstein, MD, FACP
>NCH Healthcare Group, Naples, FL, USA 
>REFERENCES 
>1. Schierbeck LL, Rejnmark L,
Tofteng CL, Stilgren L, Eiken P, Mosekilde L, Køber L, Jensen JE. Effect
of hormone replacement therapy on cardiovascular events in recently postmenopausal
women: randomised trial. BMJ 2012; 345: e6409. 
>2. Sacks FM, Pfeffer MA, Moye
LA, et al, for the Cholesterol and Recurrent Events Trial Investigators.
The effect of pravastatin on coronary events after myocardial infarction
in patients with average cholesterol levels. N Engl J Med 1996; 335: 1001–9. 
>3. Bassan M, Panush N. Treating
hypercholesterolemia—without the hype. Am J Cardiol 1997; 79: 1001–3. 
>4. Kannel WB, Levy D. Menopause,
hormones, and cardiovascular vulnerability in women. Arch Intern Med 2004;
164: 479-81. 
>5. Mascitelli L, Goldstein MR,
Pezzetta F. Explaining sex difference in coronary heart disease: is it
time to shift from the oestrogen hypothesis to the iron hypothesis? J Cardiovasc
Med (Hagerstown) 2011; 12: 64-5. 
>6. Sullivan JL. Iron and the
sex difference in heart disease risk. Lancet 1981; 1: 1293-4. 
>  
>On Thu, Oct 11, 2012 at 9:57 AM,
healingjia Price <[log in to unmask]>
wrote: 
>As one who enjoyed profound and
immediate benefits I would like to still see this replicated as a blind,
industry free trial and also wonder if strategic genomic analysis would
be helpful. The 8% rate is a concern what was exclusion criteria? 
>Amy
>
>Amy Price   
>Empower 2 Go  
>Building Brain Potential 
>Http://empower2go.org 
>Sent from my iPad 
>
>On 11 Oct 2012, at 02:38 PM, "Klim McPherson" <[log in to unmask]>
wrote: 
>I would be fascinated to know the
dispassionate opinion of this group on a quite large trial of HRT v nothing
which appears to negate a great deal of evidence from other RCT's on the
effect of HRT on CVD and breast cancer in particular. 
>  
>It is not blind (does that matter
and how much). It is funded by HRT Pharma, most of the PI's have advisory
roles with the companies. 8% of eligible patients were recruited into the
trial ……….. 
>  
>Where should it sit in the panoply
of evidence on the safety of HRT ?? 
>  
>This is an important question because
of the unambiguous and profound benefits of HRT for menopausal symptoms
but particularly bone density loss, and hence the 'need' to downplay possible
harms. 
>  
>  
>http://www.bmj.com/content/345/bmj.e6409 
>  
>  
>Your opinions would be greatly
valued. 
>  
>  
>  
>Klim McPherson MA Phd FFPH FMedSci 
>Visiting Professor of Public Health
Epidemiology 
>Nuffield Dept Obstetrics &
Gynaecology 
>Emeritus Fellow of New College
  
>University of Oxford 
>Mobile 07711335993 
>  
>  
>  
>
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