The data underpinning a controversial study of the use as vitamin C as a sepsis treatment may in fact be fraudulent, according to an analysis by an Australian physician and statistician, reports MedPage Today.
PhD student Kyle Sheldrick, MBBS, alleges that the pre- and post- comparison groups involved in the 94-patient study were too similar to be realistic.
In an interview with MedPage Today, Sheldrick said the case is “extreme”, stating that “This is probably the most obviously fake data I have seen. … These groups are more similar than would be probable.”
The paper, led by Paul Marik, MD – who led another COVID protocol study that has since been retracted – has been the subject of much debate in the intensive care community since it was published in 2017. The so-called HAT protocol was a simple regimen of hydrocortisone, ascorbic acid (vitamin C), and thiamine which could have saved many lives easily if it indeed worked. Obviously, there was much excitement worldwide about the significance of the findings – but not all were convinced.
“The effect size seemed just impossible,” said Nick Mark, MD, an ICU physician at Swedish Medical Center. “It seemed too good to be true.”
The trial was followed by larger studies, and so far none have shown shown a similar reduction in mortality, raising suspicions even further, Dr Mark said. With Sheldrick’s analysis, the penny dropped: “This was under our noses for 5 years,” Mark said. “This isn’t just a mistake. We know things can be done unethically, but to actually fake it? That it’s not just flawed, but perhaps actually fraudulent?”
Sheldrick told MedPage Today the key problem with the Marik paper is “probably the most common sign of fraud that we see, which is overly similar groups at baseline.” That is, people tend to fake data which do not vary enough from the average.
Sheldrick said he first looked at the study methods, which noted a pre- and post- comparison design, rather than a randomised or matched case-control design. With such a design, one would expect a more random distribution of baseline characteristics, but that wasn’t the case for the Marik paper, he said.
A further analysis with Fisher’s test showed that most P-values were 1, meaning they were distributed perfectly evenly across two time periods – and only one fell below 0.5. Instead, an even spread should be expected with an overall value of 0.5.
Sheldrick sent his findings to the journal CHEST and to Marik’s former employer Sentara Norfolk General Hospital, but had not heard back from either.
While Sentara Norfolk General Hospital did not respond to comment, and the journal CHEST could not confirm whether an investigation was underway but that it did take ethical concerns very seriously.
A spokesperson for Dr Marik emailed a statement to MedPage Today, claiming that the conclusions had been validated in several meta-analyses, and recommended the source examine “this and other research on the data before making false allegations on social media. Such claims are harmful and do not add to the public discourse.”
This wouldn’t be the first time concerns have been raised about data in a paper that Dr Marik co-authored. In November 2021, the Journal of Intensive Care Medicine (JICM) retracted an article by Marik and others on their MATH+ protocol for COVID. The retraction followed a communication that raised concerns about the accuracy of COVID mortality data from the hospital used in the article.
“It seems a bit improbable for someone to discover two miracle cures in three years,” Dr Mark commented to MedPage Today.
Dr Mark noted that the 2017 paper is widely cited, and even if the intervention was not directly harmful, the resources invested in subsequent large, high-quality trials of vitamin C and sepsis could have been better spent.
“While I’m really glad we did high-quality studies and had brilliant people working on this, it’s kind of a shame,” he said. “Instead of studying vitamin C based on a faulty premise, we could have spent our efforts elsewhere.”
Source: MedPage Today