Purpose: To study the landscape of funding in intensive care research and assess whether the reported outcomes of industry-funded randomized controlled trials (RCTs) are more favorable. Methods: We systematically assembled meta-analyses evaluating any type of intervention in the critical care setting and reporting the source of funding for each included RCT. Furthermore, when the intervention was a drug or biologic, we searched also the original RCT articles, when their funding information was unavailable in the meta-analysis. We then qualitatively summarized the sources of funding. For binary outcomes, separate summary odds ratios were calculated for trials with and without industry funding. We then calculated the ratio of odds ratios (ROR...
Objective: To assess if commercially sponsored trials are associated with higher success rates than ...
Objective: To assess the number and quality of the reporting of randomised controlled trials (RCTs) ...
Previous authors have suggested a higher likelihood for industry-sponsored (IS) studies to have posi...
Purpose: To study the landscape of funding in intensive care research and assess whether the reporte...
Background: There has been substantial interest from the pharmaceutical industry to study and develo...
Objectives: To map the current status of head-to-head comparative randomized evidence and to assess ...
OBJECTIVES: To determine which multicenter randomized controlled trials in critically ill patients h...
Abstract OBJECTIVES: To estimate federal dollars spent on critical care research, the cost of provid...
International audienceObjectives: To investigate whether intervention effect estimates for mortality...
RationaleMeta-analysed intervention effect estimates are perceived to represent the highest level of...
OBJECTIVES: We aimed to identify all treatments that affect mortality in adult critically ill patien...
Background: Critical commentaries suggest that wound care randomised controlled trials (RCTs) are of...
Objective: To investigate pharmaceutical or medical device industry funding of patient groups. Desig...
Introduction Meta-epidemiological analyses have demonstrated that reported trial design characterist...
Background: Trials financed by for-profit organizations have been associated with favorable outcomes...
Objective: To assess if commercially sponsored trials are associated with higher success rates than ...
Objective: To assess the number and quality of the reporting of randomised controlled trials (RCTs) ...
Previous authors have suggested a higher likelihood for industry-sponsored (IS) studies to have posi...
Purpose: To study the landscape of funding in intensive care research and assess whether the reporte...
Background: There has been substantial interest from the pharmaceutical industry to study and develo...
Objectives: To map the current status of head-to-head comparative randomized evidence and to assess ...
OBJECTIVES: To determine which multicenter randomized controlled trials in critically ill patients h...
Abstract OBJECTIVES: To estimate federal dollars spent on critical care research, the cost of provid...
International audienceObjectives: To investigate whether intervention effect estimates for mortality...
RationaleMeta-analysed intervention effect estimates are perceived to represent the highest level of...
OBJECTIVES: We aimed to identify all treatments that affect mortality in adult critically ill patien...
Background: Critical commentaries suggest that wound care randomised controlled trials (RCTs) are of...
Objective: To investigate pharmaceutical or medical device industry funding of patient groups. Desig...
Introduction Meta-epidemiological analyses have demonstrated that reported trial design characterist...
Background: Trials financed by for-profit organizations have been associated with favorable outcomes...
Objective: To assess if commercially sponsored trials are associated with higher success rates than ...
Objective: To assess the number and quality of the reporting of randomised controlled trials (RCTs) ...
Previous authors have suggested a higher likelihood for industry-sponsored (IS) studies to have posi...