Regulatory Forum Opinion Piece*

Author:

Boorman Gary A.1,Foster John R.2,Laast Victoria A.3,Francke Sabine4

Affiliation:

1. Covance Laboratories, Inc., Chantilly, Virginia, USA

2. ToxPath Sciences Ltd, Congelton, Cheshire, UK

3. Covance Laboratories, Shanghai, China

4. U.S. Office of Facilities and Administrative Services/Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition/Food and Drug Administration, College Park, Maryland, USA

Abstract

Historically it has been easier to publish positive scientific results than negative data not supporting the research hypothesis. This appears to be increasing, with fewer negative studies appearing in the literature across many disciplines. Failure to recognize the value of negative results has important implications for the toxicology community. Implications include perpetuating scientific fields based upon selective or occasionally erroneous, positive results. One example is decreased vaccination rates and increased measles infections that can lead to childhood mortality following one erroneous positive study linking vaccination to adverse effects despite multiple negative studies. Publication of negative data that challenges existing paradigms enhances progress by stopping further investment in scientifically barren topics, decreases the use of animals, and focuses research in more fruitful areas. The National Toxicology Program (NTP) publishes both positive and negative rodent data. Retrospective analysis of the NTP database has provided insights on the carcinogenic process and in the gradual acceptance of using fewer animals in safety studies. This article proposes that careful publication of both positive and negative data can enhance product safety assessment, add robustness to safety determinations in the regulatory decision-making process, and should be actively encouraged by those determining journal editorial policy.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cell Biology,Toxicology,Molecular Biology,Pathology and Forensic Medicine

Reference43 articles.

1. Prediction of Rodent Carcinogenesis: An Evaluation of Prechronic Liver Lesions as Forecasters of Liver Tumors in NTP Carcinogenicity Studies

2. Anderson G., Sprott H., Olsen B. R. (2013). Opinion: Publish negative results. The scientist. Accessed November 17, 2014. http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/33968/title/Opinion-Publish-Negative-Results/.

3. Definitive relationships among chemical structure, carcinogenicity and mutagenicity for 301 chemicals tested by the U.S. NTP

4. Boorman G. A., Bernheim N. J., Galvin M., Newton S. A., Parham F. M., Portier C. J., Wolfe M. S. (NIEHS EMF-RAPID Program Staff that prepared the report) 1999 NIEHS REPORT on health effects from exposure to power-line frequency electric and magnetic fields Prepared in response to the 1992 energy policy act (PL 102-486, Section 2118). NIH Publication No. 99-4493. NIEHS, Research Triangle Park, NC.

5. Chronic Toxicity/Oncogenicity Evaluation of 60 Hz (Power Frequency) Magnetic Fields in F344/N Rats

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