Brussels, 17 March 2014
If adopted in early April 2014, the new Regulation on clinical  trials should bring greater transparency concerning clinical trial data  and results. However, the proposed Trade Secrets directive (published in  November 2013) may curb the advances gained in the Clinical Trials  regulation.
> Click here to download the joint press release (pdf, 627 Ko)
Press Release
In early April 2014, the European Parliament will discuss and vote in plenary on the proposed Regulation on clinical trials, which would repeal Directive 2001/20/EC.
If approved, this Regulation will apply by mid-2016 and:
    - Allow sponsors to submit a single application dossier through a centralised, web-based portal (the EU portal) to all Member States in which the sponsor wishes to conduct a clinical trial; the application will undergo joint “scientific assessment” by the Member States concerned, led by a reporting Member State;
- Attempt to address differences in the risk to subject safety posed by clinical trials, by excluding “non-interventional studies” from the scope of the Regulation, and by creating a new category of clinical trials called “low-intervention clinical trials”;
- Establish greater transparency concerning clinical trial data and results.
This final text is the result of intense efforts by Parliament, Council and civil society
The text available for adoption by Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) is an improved version of the EU Commission's initial proposal from July 2012, particularly with regard to transparency requirements (a) (1). 
The Environment and Public Health (ENVI) Committee of the European Parliament and the Council have upheld the protection of trial subjects by restoring the role of national Ethics Committees (a cornerstone of Directive 2001/20/EC) (Article 4), and by making clear that Ethics Committees' opinions are binding (b).
The ENVI Committee and the Council have nonetheless also accepted or adopted other measures that undermine the protection of trial subjects:
    - they accepted the concept of “tacit authorisation” “in order to ensure that timelines are adhered to” by Member States (Recital 8);
- they deleted the Commission's proposal that “each Member State should establish a national indemnification mechanism” (c);
- they agreed that clinical trials using investigational medicinal products “off-label” (i.e. not in accordance with the terms of the marketing authorisation) could be considered “low-intervention trials” when off-label use is “supported by published scientific evidence on safety and efficacy” (Article 2(3)) (d).
Unfortunately, the ENVI and the Council have also failed:
    - to demand that investigators (clinicians) – not the trials' sponsors – report all serious adverse reactions to health authorities, both “unexpected” and “expected”, thus allowing sponsors to continue to withhold safety data;
- to require comparative clinical trials so that the new medicine would be compared with the reference (“gold standard”) treatment, in order to determine whether it has a therapeutic advantage (e).
On the issue of clinical data transparency, the Commission had initially proposed that a summary of the trial's results should be made publicly available within one year following the trial's completion (alignment with existing US requirements) (Article 34).
The Environment and Public health (ENVI) Committee of the European Parliament and the Council have improved on this proposal, by adopting a number of other major provisions:
    - A statement that Clinical Study Reports (CSRs), which are comprehensive documents presenting clinical trial results in a detailed and structured manner, “should not be considered commercially confidential once a marketing authorisation has been granted, the decision-making process on the application for a marketing authorisation has been completed, or an application for marketing authorisation has been withdrawn” (Recital 20a). Moreover, when the trial has been conducted to support a marketing authorisation, CSRs will have to be made publicly available within 30 days after the marketing authorisation decision or the application's withdrawal (Article 34); and in the event of “non-compliance with the provisions laid down in this Regulation” on the “information intended to be made publicly available to the EU database” or on “subject safety”, Member States are required to apply dissuasive penalties (Article 89a) (f);
- A statement that “reasons for temporary halt and early termination” of a trial, as well as regulatory documents about a trial's authorisation should not be considered commercially confidential (Recital 20a);
- Clarification of the responsibilities of the European Medicines Agency (EMA) in terms of maintaining an EU database in which all information on clinical trials will be stored, part of which will be publicly accessible (Article 78(3)).
New Trade Secrets directive: focus on industrial interests creates cause for concern
Just when it seemed that the new Regulation on clinical trials would finally deliver greater transparency, on 28 November 2013, the European Commission published a new proposed directive on Trade Secrets, which gave significant cause for concern (2).
As a result of pressure from North American negotiators during the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) talks, this proposed directive: includes a very broad definition of trade secrets; encourages litigation, particularly by preserving the confidentiality of trade secrets during and after legal proceedings; and establishes dissuasive sanctions. The trade association of the European pharmaceutical industry promptly celebrated the release of the proposed directive on trade secrets: “Almost every aspect of the drug development process involves the generation and application of substantial amounts of technical information and know-how, including the (...) clinical trials phase.” (3).
In view of these developments, we call upon Members of the European Parliament to:
    - remain extremely vigilant during the forthcoming discussions on the proposed Trade Secrets directive, 
- and demand that clinical data on pharmaceutical products and medical devices remain outside the scope of this directive. 
Association Internationale de la Mutualité (AIM)
Health Action International (HAI) Europe
International Society of Drug Bulletins (ISDB)
Medicines in Europe Forum (MiEF)
Nordic Cochrane Collaboration
TransAtlantic Consumer Dialogue (TACD)
WEMOS
©AIM, HAI Europe, ISDB, MiEF, Nordic Cochrane Collaboration, TACD, WEMOS March 2014 
Notes:
a - The original proposal included several measures  deregulating  clinical research in human subjects, thereby undermining  the protection  of trial participants. For more details, read our joint  analysis ("New  Proposal for a Regulation on Clinical Trials – Joint  analysis" 5  February 2013: 12 pages) available HERE
b - “A concerned Member State shall refuse to approve a clinical  trial  (...) where an ethics committee has issued a negative opinion”  (Article  8(3a)).
c - It was replaced by “an arrangement that is  equivalent as regards  its purpose and which is appropriate to the nature  and the extent of  the risk”, which could lead to the lowest common  denominator becoming  the standard for damage compensation among Member  States (Chapter XII).  
d - The risk is that manufacturers would be  encouraged first to seek  marketing authorisation for a narrow  therapeutic indication, which  would be granted based on evidence from  small, short-term standard  clinical trials, since the indication would  apply to few patients.  Then, it would be in manufacturers’ interests to  encourage off-label  use, in order to gather scientific evidence on the  safety and efficacy  of that medicine when used in these off-label  indications. Ultimately,  such a provision would entitle the manufacturer  to ask for an extension  of the marketing authorisation based on the  less stringent rules that  apply to “low-intervention trials”. 
e -  According to the Declaration of Helsinki, this requirement is an  ethical  principle for medical research involving human subjects. It  would  moreover have been an important incentive to transform the  current  corporate-based research and development model into a new model  that  meets real public health needs.
f - In fact, according to several  studies, CSRs are NEVER commercially  confidential (refs 4,5). We therefore repeatedly advocated that they  must be released no later than  one year after the trial's completion.
References:
1 - Council  of the European Union “Consolidated text of the draft  regulation on  Clinical trials on medicinal products for human use as  approved by the  Permanent Representatives Committee (Part 1) on 20  December 2013”   http://register.consilium.europa.eu/doc/srv?l=EN&t=PDF&gc=true&sc=false&f=ST%2017866%202013%20INIT:   152 pages.
2 - European Commission (Directorate General Internal  Market and  Services) “Proposal for a Directive of the European  Parliament and of  the Council on the protection of undisclosed know-how  and business  information (trade secrets) against their unlawful  acquisition, use and  disclosure COM(2013) 813 final - 2013/0402 (COD)”  Brussels,  28.11.2013: 26 pages. 
3 - The European Federation of  Pharmaceutical Industries and  Associations “EFPIA welcomes the Commission's Proposal on the  protection of undisclosed know-how and  business information ("Trade  Secrets")” press release published on 28  November 2013. www.efpia.eu: 1  page.
4 - Doshi P and Jefferson T  “Clinical study reports of randomised  controlled trials: an exploratory  review of previously confidential  industry reports” BMJ Open 2013; 3:  e002496. 
5 - Wieseler B et al. (Institute for Quality and Efficiency  in Health  Care, Germany) “Completeness of Reporting of Patient-Relevant  Clinical  Trial Outcomes: Comparison of Unpublished Clinical Study  Reports with  Publicly Available Data” PLoS Med 2013; 10(10): e1001526.   doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.1001526.
> Click here to download the joint press release (pdf, 627 Ko)