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Maybe you think you know...
I've heard the FDA has pretty lax regulation on what exactly needs to be submitted for pharma acceptance, but here's an interesting article that's possibly discussion provoking.
http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/38881/title/Many_drug_trials_never_see_publication
I often see it mentioned that pharma is evidence based and largely infallible because of it, and that if a drug is proven not to work, it's pulled. Well, this article suggests that it's not so easy to stop a multi-million dollar money train that's already barreling down the tracks.
ex:
" ...The new analysis examined 164 trials for 33 new drugs that were approved by the FDA from January of 2001 to December 2002. By June 2007, 22 percent of the trials were either published only in a partial form as an abstract, or part of a pooled publication or were not published at all. The unpublished trials were predominantly those with unfavorable results, the researchers report."
I've heard the FDA has pretty lax regulation on what exactly needs to be submitted for pharma acceptance, but here's an interesting article that's possibly discussion provoking.
http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/38881/title/Many_drug_trials_never_see_publication
I often see it mentioned that pharma is evidence based and largely infallible because of it, and that if a drug is proven not to work, it's pulled. Well, this article suggests that it's not so easy to stop a multi-million dollar money train that's already barreling down the tracks.
ex:
" ...The new analysis examined 164 trials for 33 new drugs that were approved by the FDA from January of 2001 to December 2002. By June 2007, 22 percent of the trials were either published only in a partial form as an abstract, or part of a pooled publication or were not published at all. The unpublished trials were predominantly those with unfavorable results, the researchers report."

