Abstract
Background
Data unavailability impedes research transparency and is a major problem for individual participant data meta-analyses as it reduces statistical power, increases risk of bias, and may even preclude completion. The primary objectives of this study were to determine individual participant data sharing plans reported in recently registered clinical trial registration records, how data sharing commitment relates to clinical trial characteristics, and principal investigators’ attitudes, motivations and barriers to data sharing. The secondary objective was to derive recommendations to overcome identified barriers to data sharing.
Methods
This was a retrospective cohort study of all interventional trials registered on the Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ANZCTR) from 1 December 2018 to 30 November 2019, and an online cross-sectional survey of their principal investigators.
Results
In the cohort study of all clinical trials registered on the ANZCTR in the study period (n=1517), commitment to share data was low (22%, 329/1517). In the cross-sectional survey (n=281, 23% response rate), principal investigators showed strong support for the concept of data sharing (77%, 216/281) but a substantially lower intention to actually share data from their clinical trials (40%, 111/281). Major barriers to data sharing included lacking informed consent to share data, protecting participant confidentiality, and preventing misinterpretation of data or misleading secondary analyses.
Conclusions
There is a gap between high in-principle support for data sharing, and low in-practice intention from investigators to share data from their own clinical trials. Multiple pathways exist to bridge this gap by addressing the identified barriers to data sharing.
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