The Univeristy of Melbourne The Royal Melbourne Hopspital

A joint venture between The University of Melbourne and The Royal Melbourne Hospital

Publication

Funding and geographical distribution of clinical trials in infectious diseases


Authors:

  • Moffroid, Hadrien
  • Charani, Esmita
  • Blagojevic, Christina
  • Bryce, Aliya
  • Ovadia, Aaron
  • Slater, Matthew
  • Pryal, Daire
  • Careaga, Rodrigo Escobar
  • Yerramilli, Arvind
  • Daneman, Nick
  • Tong, Steven Y.C.
  • Ong, Sean W.X.

Details:

Clinical Microbiology and Infection, Volume 32, Issue 2, 2026-02-28

Article Link: Click here

Objectives The objective of this study was to map the funding flows in infectious disease randomized clinical trials (RCTs) by examining the relationships between funding sources and trial locations in high-impact journals. Methods We conducted a secondary analysis of a previously published systematic review of 1343 infectious disease RCTs published (2014–2023) in ten selected high-impact English-language general medicine and infectious disease journals. Funding source, study site, and disease focus were extracted using a standardized data extraction form and analysed by country income level using World Bank classifications. Geographical distributions of funding and study sites were visualized using global heat maps. Funding flows between country income groups were visualized using a Sankey plot. Results Of the 1343 trials, 1326 disclosed the funding source (98.7%). Most trials identified in this review were investigator-initiated (772/1326, 58.2%), with the U.S. government as the largest contributing funder (366/1326, 27.6%), and the National Institutes of Health specifically involved in funding 258 of 1326 (19.5%) of trials. When disaggregated, there was a total of 1808 unique funders. These overwhelmingly originated from high-income countries (1496/1808, 82.7%) compared with upper-middle-income (130/1808, 7.2%), low-middle-income (35/1808, 1.9%), and low-income (8/1808, 0.4%) countries. In contrast, the 4606 disaggregated locations of study by country were more distributed across income levels: high-income (2521/4606, 61.9%), upper-middle-income (918/4606, 22.5%), lower-middle-income (360/4606, 8,8%), and low-income (253/4606, 6.2%) countries. Disease focus varied geographically; trials focusing on critical care, bacterial infections, sexually transmitted infections, hepatitis, influenza, and COVID-19 were underrepresented in low-income settings. Conclusions Our study reveals skewed geographical and funding distributions in the global landscape of infectious disease RCTs published in these ten selected English-language high-impact journals. As key funders reduce funding internationally, the impact on the research landscape may disproportionately affect lower-middle-income countries. Further efforts should be made to build sustainable funding models and research capacity in lower-middle-income countries.