CT.gov Disease Geography Gap
2026-03-29 | full-registry ct.gov audit | plots, figures, and e156 bundle
Series
E156 Micro-Paper

CT.gov Disease Geography Gap

A 156-word micro-paper on how geography buckets reshape oncology, cardiovascular, and metabolic visibility in older CT.gov studies.

Cardio
Metabolic
Oncology
Geography buckets

Paper

The disease story is partly a geography story. Major condition families do not keep one stable visibility profile across buckets.

Reading note

How does geography reshape the hiddenness of major disease families once older CT.gov studies are grouped into U.S.-only, mixed, non-U.S., and no-country buckets? We analysed 249,507 eligible older closed interventional studies from the March 29, 2026 full-registry snapshot and linked geography buckets to oncology, cardiovascular, and metabolic families. The project compares two-year no-results rates, ghost-protocol rates, visible shares, and hiddenness scores across geography buckets within each selected disease family. U.S.-plus-non-U.S. studies were the cleanest geography bucket in every disease family: 29.9 percent no results in cardiovascular, 29.4 percent in metabolic, and 39.4 percent in oncology. No-U.S. studies were worst: 89.9 percent no results in cardiovascular, 90.3 percent in metabolic, and 86.8 percent in oncology. The disease story therefore depends on geography structure, because the same clinical area can move from moderately visible to deeply hidden depending on where studies are located. Geography buckets use recorded locations rather than verified recruitment shares, sponsor domicile, or disease-burden denominators.

Cardio mixed visible
49.1%
Results plus publication
Metabolic mixed visible
55.0%
Cleanest metabolic bucket
Oncology no-country ghosts
60.8%
Neither visible
Metabolic no-country hiddenness
4.27
Mean hiddenness score