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Main Author: Wjst, Matthias
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.12187
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author Wjst, Matthias
author_facet Wjst, Matthias
contents Paper mills produce fraudulent research manuscripts built on recycled tables and figures, or on entirely fabricated data. A more recent pattern has emerged: apparently genuine trials with real patients, but with manipulated statistical analyses engineered to support regulatory approval while remaining plausible to peer reviewers. This analysis applies the INSPECT-SR trustworthiness framework to 23 randomised controlled trials and post-marketing studies linked to CinnaGen Co., Iran's largest biosimilar manufacturer, and its clinical operations subsidiary Orchid Pharmed. Papers were retrieved from PubMed and assessed against the original study records. A total of 180 problems were identified across nine categories. The five most frequent issues were reporting failures (n=37), arithmetic violations (n=28), design flaws (n=26), registration irregularities (n=25), and statistical errors (n=25). Analysis of the co authorship network shows that trial design, data management, and manuscript preparation were concentrated within the sponsoring organisation. The underlying structural drivers appear to be a convergence of domestic publication incentives, commercial pressure from international sanctions that created demand for domestically produced drugs, and regulatory pathways that require this body of trial evidence. Because this pattern differs fundamentally from classical paper mills, we propose the term clinical trial engineering to describe it. Regulatory bodies, including the European Medicines Agency (EMA), should treat published clinical evidence from this cluster as unverified until independent access to individual participant data is granted
format Preprint
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institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle A clinical trial engineering firm
Wjst, Matthias
Digital Libraries
Paper mills produce fraudulent research manuscripts built on recycled tables and figures, or on entirely fabricated data. A more recent pattern has emerged: apparently genuine trials with real patients, but with manipulated statistical analyses engineered to support regulatory approval while remaining plausible to peer reviewers. This analysis applies the INSPECT-SR trustworthiness framework to 23 randomised controlled trials and post-marketing studies linked to CinnaGen Co., Iran's largest biosimilar manufacturer, and its clinical operations subsidiary Orchid Pharmed. Papers were retrieved from PubMed and assessed against the original study records. A total of 180 problems were identified across nine categories. The five most frequent issues were reporting failures (n=37), arithmetic violations (n=28), design flaws (n=26), registration irregularities (n=25), and statistical errors (n=25). Analysis of the co authorship network shows that trial design, data management, and manuscript preparation were concentrated within the sponsoring organisation. The underlying structural drivers appear to be a convergence of domestic publication incentives, commercial pressure from international sanctions that created demand for domestically produced drugs, and regulatory pathways that require this body of trial evidence. Because this pattern differs fundamentally from classical paper mills, we propose the term clinical trial engineering to describe it. Regulatory bodies, including the European Medicines Agency (EMA), should treat published clinical evidence from this cluster as unverified until independent access to individual participant data is granted
title A clinical trial engineering firm
topic Digital Libraries
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.12187