A computationally simple central monitoring procedure, effectively applied to empirical trial data with known fraud

Publication date

2017-07

Authors

van den Bor, Rutger M.
Vaessen, Petrus W J
Oosterman, Bas
Zuithoff, Nicolaas P.A.ISNI 0000000396080051
Grobbee, RickORCID 0000-0003-4472-4468ISNI 0000000030206553
Roes, Kit C BORCID 0000-0002-6775-1963ISNI 0000000040154793

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

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License

taverne

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Central monitoring of multicenter clinical trials becomes an ever more feasible quality assurance tool, in particular for the detection of data fabrication. More widespread application, across both industry sponsored as well as academic clinical trials, requires central monitoring methodologies that are both effective and relatively simple in implementation. STUDY DESIGN AND SETTING: We describe a computationally simple fraud detection procedure intended to be applied repeatedly and (semi-)automatically to accumulating baseline data and to detect data fabrication in multicenter trials as early as possible. The procedure is based on anticipated characteristics of fabricated data. It consists of seven analyses, each of which flags approximately 10% of the centers. Centers that are flagged three or more times are considered "potentially fraudulent" and require additional investigation. The procedure is illustrated using empirical trial data with known fraud. RESULTS: In the illustration data, the fraudulent center is detected in most repeated applications to the accumulating trial data, while keeping the proportion of false-positive results at sufficiently low levels. CONCLUSION: The proposed procedure is computationally simple and appears to be effective in detecting center-level data fabrication. However, assessment of the procedure on independent trial data sets with known data fabrication is required.

Keywords

Central monitoring, Fraud detection, Investigator misconduct, Risk-based monitoring, Scientific fraud, Statistical monitoring, Taverne, Journal Article

Citation

van den Bor, R M, Vaessen, P W J, Oosterman, B J, Zuithoff, N P A, Grobbee, D E & Roes, K C B 2017, 'A computationally simple central monitoring procedure, effectively applied to empirical trial data with known fraud', Journal of Clinical Epidemiology, vol. 87, pp. 59-69. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclinepi.2017.03.018