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OPINION
Something Rotten at the Core of Science?
by David F. Horrobin
Abstract
A recent U.S. Supreme Court decision and an analysis of the peer review
system substantiate complaints about this fundamental aspect of scientific
research. Far from filtering out junk science, peer review may be blocking
the flow of --innovation and corrupting public support of science.
The U.S. Supreme Court has recently been wrestling with the issues of the
acceptability and reliability of scientific evidence. In its judgement in
the case of Daubert v. Merrell Dow
,
the court attempted to set guidelines for U.S. judges to follow when
listening to scientific experts.
Whether or not findings had been
published in a peer-reviewed journal provided one important criterion. But
in a key caveat, the court emphasized that peer review might sometimes be
flawed, and that therefore this criterion was not unequivocal evidence of
validity or otherwise.
A recent analysis of peer review adds to this
controversy by identifying an alarming lack of correlation between
reviewers' recommendations.
Many scientists and lawyers are unhappy about the admission by the top
legal authority in the United States that peer review might in some
circumstances be flawed [1]. David Goodstein
, writing in the Guide to the
Federal Rules of Evidence - one of whose functions is to interpret the
judgement in the case of Daubert - states that "Peer review is one of the
sacred pillars of the scientific edifice" [2].
In public, at least, almost
all scientists would agree. Those who disagree are almost always dismissed
in pejorative terms such as "maverick," "failure," and "driven by
bitterness."
Peer review is central to the organization of modern science. The
peer-review process for submitted manuscripts is a crucial determinant of
what sees the light of day in a particular journal. Fortunately, it is
less effective in blocking publication completely; there are so many
journals that most even modestly competent studies will be published
provided that the authors are determined enough.
The publication might not
be in a prestigious journal, but at least it will get into print. However,
peer review is also the process that controls access to funding, and here
the situation becomes much more serious. There might often be only two or
three realistic sources of funding for a project, and the networks of
reviewers for these sources are often interacting and interlocking.
Failure to pass the peer-review process might well mean that a project is
never funded. Science bases its presumed authority in the world on the
reliability and objectivity of the evidence that is produced. If the
pronouncements of science are to be greeted with public confidence - and
there is plenty of evidence to suggest that such confidence is low and
eroding - it should be able to demonstrate that peer review, "one of the
sacred pillars of the scientific edifice," is a process that has been
validated objectively as a reliable process for putting a stamp of
approval on work that has been done.
Peer review should also have been
validated as a reliable method for making appropriate choices as to what
work should be done. Yet when one looks for that evidence it is simply not
there.
For 30 years or so, I and others have been pointing out the fallibility of
peer review and have been calling for much more openness and objective
evaluation of its procedures [3-5 ]. For the most part, the scientific
establishment, its journals, and its grant-giving bodies have resisted
such open evaluation.
They fail to understand that if a process that is as
central to the scientific endeavor as peer review has no validated
experimental base, and if it consistently refuses open scrutiny, it is not
surprising that the public is increasingly skeptical about the agenda and
the conclusions of science.
Largely because of this antagonism to openness and evaluation, there is a
great lack of good evidence either way concerning the objectivity and
validity of peer review. What evidence there is does not give confidence
but is open to many criticisms.
Now, Peter Rothwell and Christopher Martyn
have thrown a bombshell [6]. Their conclusions are measured and cautious,
but there is little doubt that they have provided solid evidence of
something truly rotten at the core of science.
Rothwell and Martyn performed a detailed evaluation
of the
reviews of papers submitted to two neuroscience journals. Each journal
normally sent papers out to two reviewers. Reviews of abstracts and oral
presentations sent to two neuroscience meetings were also evaluated.
One
meeting sent its abstracts to 16 reviewers and the other to 14 reviewers,
which provides a good opportunity for statistical evaluation. Rothwell and
Martyn analyzed the correlations among reviewers' recommendations by
analysis of variance. Their report should be read in full; however, the
conclusions are alarmingly clear. For one journal, the relationships among
the reviewers' opinions were no better than that obtained by chance. For
the other journal, the relationship was only fractionally better. For the
meeting abstracts, the content of the abstract accounted for only about 10
to 20 percent of the variance in opinion of referees, and other factors
accounted for 80 to 90 percent of the variance.
These appalling figures will not be surprising to critics of peer review,
but they give solid substance to what these critics have been saying. The
core system by which the scientific community allots prestige (in terms of
oral presentations at major meetings and publication in major journals)
and funding is a non-validated charade whose processes generate results
little better than does chance.
Given the fact that most reviewers are
likely to be mainstream and broadly supportive of the existing
organization of the scientific enterprise, it would not be surprising if
the likelihood of support for truly innovative research was considerably
less than that provided by chance.
Scientists frequently become very angry about the public's rejection of
the conclusions of the scientific process. However, the Rothwell and
Martyn findings, coming on top of so much other evidence, suggest that the
public might be right in groping its way to a conclusion that there is
something rotten in the state of science. Public support can only erode
further if science does not put its house in order and begin a real
attempt to develop validated processes for the distribution of publication
rights, credit for completed work, and funds for new work. Funding is the
most important issue that most urgently requires opening up to rigorous
research and objective evaluation.
What relevance does this have for pharmacology and pharmaceuticals?
Despite enormous amounts of hype and optimistic puffery, pharmaceutical
research is actually failing [7]. The annual number of new chemical
entities submitted for approval is steadily falling in spite of the
enthusiasm for techniques such as combinatorial chemistry, high-throughput
screening, and pharmacogenomics. The drive to merge pharmaceutical
companies is driven by failure, and not by success.
Could the peer-review processes in both academia and industry have
destroyed rather than promoted innovation? In my own field of
psychopharmacology, could it be that peer review has ensured that in
depression and schizophrenia, we are still largely pursuing themes that
were initiated in the 1950s? Could peer review explain the fact that in
both diseases the efficacy of modern drugs is no better than those
compounds developed in 1950?
Even in terms of side-effects, where the
differences between old and new drugs are much hyped, modern research has
failed substantially. Is it really a success that 27 of every 100 patients
taking the selective 5-HT reuptake inhibitors stop treatment within six
weeks compared with the 30 of every 100 who take a 1950s tricyclic
antidepressant compound?
The Rothwell-Martyn bombshell is a wake-up call
to the cozy establishments who run science. If science is to have any
credibility - and also if it is to be successful - the peer-review process
must be put on a much sounder and properly validated basis or scrapped
altogether.
David F. Horrobin , a longtime critic of
anonymous peer review. heads Laxdale Ltd., which develops novel treatments
for psychiatric disorders. In 1972 he founded Medical Hypotheses
, the
only journal fully devoted to discussion of ideas in medicine.
Andrzej Krauze is an illustrator,
poster maker, cartoonist, and painter who illustrates regularly for HMS
Beagle, The Guardian, The Sunday Telegraph, Bookseller, and New Statesman.
References
1. Daubert v. Merrel Dow Pharmaceuticals
509 U.S. 579 (1993), 509, 579.
2. Goodstein, D. 2000. How Science Works. In U.S. Federal Judiciary
Reference Manual on Evidence, pp. 66–72.
3. Horrobin, D.F. 1990. The philosophical basis of peer review and the
suppression of innovation. J. Am. Med. Assoc. 263:1438–1441.
4. Horrobin, D.F. 1996. Peer review of grant applications: A harbinger for
mediocrity in clinical research? Lancet 348:1293-1295.
5. Horrobin, D.F. 1981-1982. Peer review: Is the good the enemy of the
best? J. Res. Commun. Stud. 3:327–334.
6. Rothwell, P.M. and Martyn, C.N. 2000. Reproducibility of peer review in
clinical neuroscience: Is agreement between reviewers any greater than
would be expected by chance alone?
Brain 123:1964–1969.
7. Horrobin, D.F. 2000. Innovation in the pharmaceutical industry. J. R.
Soc. Med. 93:341–345.
Thanks to Trends in Pharmacological Sciences
, Vol. 22, No. 2,
February 2001
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