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Data in drug promotional brochures can be inaccurate

03.02.06 | BMC (BioMed Central)

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Roberto Cardarelli and colleagues from University of North Texas Health Science Center, Texas, USA asked physicians in five clinics to collect the promotional brochures they had received from pharmaceutical companies. Twenty brochures representing 20 different drugs were collected from October to December 2004 and the original corresponding studies were obtained. Two reviewers compared the content of each brochure with the data presented in the original study.

Cardarelli et al.'s results show that for three of the brochures studied, the data presented on the brochure differed from the results of the underlying study. Of the 20 identified studies, 15 studies were rated as valid and 16 had been funded by the pharmaceutical company producing the drug.

Article:
A cross-sectional evidence-based review of pharmaceutical promotional marketing brochures and their underlying studies: Is what they tell us important and true?
Roberto Cardarelli, John C Licciardone and Lockwood G Taylor
BMC Family Practice (in press)

BMC Family Practice

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How to Cite This Article

APA:
BMC (BioMed Central). (2006, March 2). Data in drug promotional brochures can be inaccurate. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LP22MEML/data-in-drug-promotional-brochures-can-be-inaccurate.html
MLA:
"Data in drug promotional brochures can be inaccurate." Brightsurf News, Mar. 2 2006, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LP22MEML/data-in-drug-promotional-brochures-can-be-inaccurate.html.