Norwegian scientist published fake findings in Lancet
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Tuesday, January 17, 2006
According to Norwegian and British newspaper sources, Jon Sudbø, a cancer researcher at the Norwegian Radium Hospital, fabricated at least 900 patient records in his research on NSAID drugs published in October of 2005 (PMID 16226613). According to the now-discredited research, the class of drugs, commonly used for pain management, was found to decrease the risk of oral cancer but increase the risk of heart disease.
This field of research is important for the future use of Cox-2 drugs and was received with great interest by the United States Food and Drug Administration and other organizations involved in drug safety and efficacy.
Several other scientists put their name to the article in the Lancet but claim they were misled by Sudbø. The Lancet is publishing a retraction in its upcoming edition. Probes are underway both to investigate how this article passed peer review, and whether previous research by Sudbø was fraudulent.
Sources
- Anne Hafstad "Bløffen fikk store virkninger" – Aftenposten, January 17, 2006
- Gwladys Fouché "Respected Norwegian scientist faked study on oral cancer" – EducationGuardian, January 17, 2006
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