Exclusive-Medical journals broaden inquiry into potential heart research
misconduct
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[September 13, 2022]
By Marisa Taylor and Brad Heath
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Three medical
journals recently launched independent investigations of possible data
manipulation in heart studies led by Temple University researchers,
Reuters has learned, adding new scrutiny to a misconduct inquiry by the
university and the U.S. government.
The Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology and the Journal of
Biological Chemistry are investigating five papers authored by Temple
scientists, the journals told Reuters.
A third journal owned by the Journal of American College of Cardiology (JACC),
last month retracted a paper by Temple researchers on its website
after determining that there was evidence of data manipulation. The
retracted paper had originally concluded that the widely-used blood
thinner, Xarelto, could have a healing effect on hearts.
"We are committed to preserving the integrity of the scholarly record,"
Elsevier, which owns the Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology
and publishes the two other journals on behalf of medical societies,
said in a statement to Reuters.
Philadelphia-based Temple began its own inquiry in September 2020 at the
request of the U.S. Office of Research Integrity (ORI), which oversees
misconduct investigations into federally funded research, according to a
lawsuit filed by one of the researchers.
The Temple investigation involves 15 papers published between 2008 and
2020 and supported by grants from the U.S. National Institutes of
Health, according to the court records. Nine of the studies were
supervised by Abdel Karim Sabri, a professor at Temple's Cardiovascular
Research Center.
His colleague Steven Houser, senior associate dean of research at Temple
and former president of the American Heart Association, is listed as an
author on five studies supervised by Sabri. Houser was also involved in
four additional papers under scrutiny.
Houser sued in federal court last year to stop the university's inquiry,
saying Temple sought to discredit him and steal his discoveries.
Houser "has not engaged in scientific or other misconduct, has not
falsified data, and has not participated in any bad acts with any other
scientist or academic,” Houser’s lawyer, Christopher Ezold, said in a
statement to Reuters. Houser helped review and edit the text portions of
the Sabri-supervised studies and did not provide or analyze the data,
Ezold said.
A Temple spokesperson said the university is "aware of the allegations
and is reviewing them." He would not comment further or discuss
interactions with medical journals. ORI also declined comment. Sabri and
Houser did not respond to questions.
Several research experts said that Houser, as one of multiple
co-authors, cannot be assumed to be involved in potential misconduct.
The ultimate responsibility for a study usually lies with the
supervising scientist and any researcher who contributed the specific
data under scrutiny.
EXPRESSION OF CONCERN
The probes highlight concerns over potential fabrication in medical
research and the federal funds supporting it. A Reuters investigation
published in June found that the NIH spent hundreds of millions of
dollars on heart stem cell research despite fraud allegations against
several leading scientists in the field.
The Temple inquiry also reveals a lack of consensus within the
scientific community over how such concerns should be communicated, to
prevent potentially bad science from informing future work and funding,
according to half a dozen research experts interviewed by Reuters.
Temple did not notify the medical journals that it was conducting an
inquiry at the request of the U.S. government agency, the journals told
Reuters. They said that they began their inquiries independently.
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Students walk through the campus of
Temple University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. on December 1,
2016. REUTERS/Mark Makela/File Photo
Xarelto's manufacturer, the Janssen Pharmaceuticals division of
Johnson & Johnson, also told Reuters the supervising researchers at
Temple did not notify the company about the investigation or the
retraction by the JACC journal, though two of its employees were
listed as co-authors on the paper. Janssen said their contribution
to the paper was not questioned in the retraction.
In some misconduct inquiries, universities have notified scientific
journals that an investigation is underway. That has allowed
journals to issue an "expression of concern" about specific studies,
telling readers that there may be reason to question the results. If
there is a finding of data manipulation, the journals would be
expected to retract the paper.
None of the journals that published the papers under scrutiny by
Temple have issued expressions of concern. They would not comment to
Reuters as to why they decided not to.
"It's murky because of a lack of resources for these investigations,
there's no standardization worldwide," said Arthur Caplan, head of
medical ethics at New York University's Grossman School of Medicine.
Other journals are not scrutinizing the Temple researchers' work.
Five papers flagged by ORI were published in the AHA journals
Circulation, Circulation: Heart Failure, and Circulation Research,
where Houser is a senior advisory editor.
The AHA said it had not been notified by the U.S. agency or by
Temple about their inquiry, and that it does not view itself as
responsible for investigating further. The AHA said it had issued a
correction of data on one paper at the authors' request. The paper
was the sole study under scrutiny that listed Houser as supervising
researcher.
"The American Heart Association is not a regulatory body or agency,"
the AHA said in a statement to Reuters.
FEDERAL FUNDING
Researchers and their institutions can be forced to return federal
funding that supported work tainted by data manipulation.
Houser has received nearly $40 million in NIH funding and Sabri has
received nearly $10 million since 2000, according to a Reuters
analysis of NIH grants. Houser's lawyer said that none of his NIH
funding supported the papers supervised by Sabri.
The JACC journal said in its retraction of the Xarelto research that
it launched its investigation after receiving a complaint from a
reader. In response, the researchers issued a correction of some
image data in the paper, which was supervised by Sabri and which
listed Houser as an author.
However, the journal said that the correction raised further
concerns, prompting it to hire an unidentified outside expert to
review them.
According to the retraction notice, the expert evaluation found
evidence of manipulation in seven images using a technique known as
Western blot, which determines concentrations of a specific protein
in cells or tissues under different experimental conditions. As a
result, the journal said its ethics board voted to retract the
paper.
NIH, ORI and Temple declined to comment on whether Temple would be
required to return any federal funding of the work retracted by the
JACC publication.
(Reporting by Marisa Taylor and Brad Heath; Editing by Michele
Gershberg and Edward Tobin)
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