<p><b>Objective</b></p>
<p><i>In 2014, </i>The BMJ introduced a mandatory ‘Patient
Involvement’statement in the Methods section of research articles. We investigated
the extent of patient involvement described in clinical trial research
publications in <i>The BMJ.</i> Our primary objective was to quantify patient
authorship.</p><p><br></p>
<p><b>Research design and methods</b></p>
<p>We searched PubMed (journal: <i>The BMJ</i>; publication type:
clinical trial; dates: 2015/01/01-2016/12/31) and electronically exported all retrieved
articles. Non-research articles were removed. Two authors categorised patient
involvement based on the verbatim ‘Patient Involvement’ and Acknowledgements
sections in each publication. Results were cross-checked.</p><p><br></p>
<p><b>Results</b></p>
<p>Of the 62 articles retrieved, 10 were non-research articles.
Reported patient involvement was generally low. Involvement was lowest for authorship
(1.9%; 1/52) and highest for thanking patients for their participation (57.7%;
30/52).</p><p><br></p>
<p><b>Conclusions</b></p>
<p>Despite <i>The BMJ’s</i> requirement, reported patient involvement
in clinical trial publications remains low. Patient authorship is being encouraged,
but remains rare. Advocacy efforts for meaningful patient involvement during
research, including publication planning and preparation, must continue.</p