Conflict of interest disclosure by US cardiothoracic surgeons

Author:

Melo Dyanna L.1,Islam Taufiq1,Nasser Khadija1,Bédard Eric L. R.1,Turner Simon R.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Thoracic Surgery University of Alberta Edmonton Alberta Canada

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundSurgeon–industry collaboration is a key driver of advancement in surgical technology and practice. Disclosures of financial relationships between investigators and industries are important to ensure transparent and critical evaluation of literature.MethodsAll American cardiothoracic (CT) surgeons who published in three major CT surgery journals in 2019 were identified. Whether these surgeons disclosed any conflicts of interest was recorded and compared to actual payments received within 5 years of publication as reported by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services data.ResultsIn the study period, there were 1079 unique manuscripts involving 885 American CT surgeons as authors, which combined for 2719 author instances. Of these, 96.2% of authors (851 of 885) received payments from companies. The authors who received payments produced 2651 author instances (97.4%). Financial disclosure was reported in only 11.4% (301 of 2651) of these instances. In total, 851 surgeons received more than $187 million over 5 years, with the highest‐paid surgeon receiving an average of over $5.9 million per year. The largest individual payments were from “Associated Research Funding,” with over $115 million being paid to 277 surgeons over 5 years. The top paying company issued over $96.5 million to American CT surgeons over 5 years.ConclusionsNearly all the reviewed publications in three top CT surgery journals were by surgeons who received payments from companies, but very few of these payments were recorded as potential conflicts of interest. A more consistent and robust policy of COI disclosure is needed to reduce perceptions of bias.

Publisher

Wiley

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