Marketing medicines through randomised controlled trials: the case of interferon

Publication date

1998-10-31

Authors

Pieters, ToineORCID 0000-0002-8156-8436ISNI 0000000035417616

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Advisors

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Document Type

Article
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Abstract

Randomised clinical trials are regarded as a most helpful tool to relieve medical practice of subjectivity. Interferon became a part of everyday clinical practice through randomised clinical trials. Despite initial disappointment with its clinical efficacy, interferon became legitimised as a part of medical practice. Randomised clinical trials had the side effect of widening interferon's therapeutic profile and were central to the marketing strategies of pharmaceutical companies. The use and interpretation of randomised clinical trials differ substantially for experimental drugs in serious illness and for research into less serious diseases

Keywords

interferon, neoplasm, clinical practice, clinical trial, controlled clinical trial, drug efficacy, drug industry, drug marketing, human, medical research, priority journal, randomized controlled trial, short survey, virus infection

Citation

Pieters, T 1998, 'Marketing medicines through randomised controlled trials : the case of interferon', British Medical Journal, vol. 317, no. 7167, pp. 1231-1233. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.317.7167.1231