Hasenboehler Erik A, Choudhry Imran K, Newman Justin T, Smith Wade R, Ziran Bruce H, Stahel Philip F
Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Denver Health Medical Center, University of Colorado School of Medicine, 777 Bannock Street, Denver, CO 80204, USA.
Patient Saf Surg. 2007 Nov 27;1(1):4. doi: 10.1186/1754-9493-1-4.
Research articles reporting positive findings in the fields of orthopedic and general surgery appear to be represented at a considerably higher prevalence in the peer-reviewed literature, compared to published studies on negative or neutral data. This "publication bias" may alter the balance of the available evidence-based literature and may affect patient safety in surgery by depriving important information from unpublished negative studies.
A comprehensive review of all published articles in a defined 7-year period was performed in 12 representative journals in the fields of orthopedic and general surgery. Every article published in all volumes of these journals between January 2000 and December 2006 was reviewed and rated by three investigators. Rating of articles was performed according to a uniform, standardized algorithm. All original articles were stratified into "positive", "negative" or "neutral", depending on the reported results. All non-original papers were excluded from analysis.
A total of 30,197 publications were reviewed over a 7-year time-period. After excluding all non-original articles, a total of 16,397 original papers were included in the final analysis. Of these, 12,251 (74%) articles were found to report positive findings, 2,709 (17%) reported negative results, and 1,437 (9%) were neutral. A similar publication pattern was found among all years and all journals analyzed. Altogether, 91% of all original papers reported significant data (positive or negative), whereas only 9% were neutral studies that did not report any significant findings.
There is a disproportionately high number of articles reporting positive results published in the surgical literature. A bias towards publishing positive data will systematically overestimate the clinical relevance of treatment effects by disregarding important information derived from unpublished negative studies. This "publication bias" remains an area of concern and may affect the quality of care of patients undergoing surgical procedures.
与已发表的关于阴性或中性数据的研究相比,报道骨科和普通外科领域阳性研究结果的科研文章在同行评审文献中的占比似乎要高得多。这种“发表偏倚”可能会改变现有循证文献的平衡,并且可能通过剥夺未发表的阴性研究中的重要信息而影响外科手术中的患者安全。
对骨科和普通外科领域12种代表性期刊在规定的7年期间内发表的所有文章进行全面综述。由三名研究人员对2000年1月至2006年12月期间这些期刊各卷发表的每篇文章进行评审和评级。文章评级按照统一、标准化的算法进行。所有原创文章根据报道的结果分为“阳性”、“阴性”或“中性”。所有非原创论文均排除在分析之外。
在7年时间里共评审了30197篇出版物。排除所有非原创文章后,最终分析纳入了16397篇原创论文。其中,12251篇(74%)文章报道了阳性研究结果,2709篇(17%)报道了阴性结果,1437篇(9%)为中性。在分析的所有年份和所有期刊中均发现了类似的发表模式。总体而言,所有原创论文中有91%报道了显著数据(阳性或阴性),而只有9%是未报道任何显著研究结果的中性研究。
外科文献中报道阳性结果的文章数量不成比例地高。偏向发表阳性数据会通过忽视未发表的阴性研究中的重要信息而系统性地高估治疗效果的临床相关性。这种“发表偏倚”仍然是一个令人担忧的问题,可能会影响接受外科手术患者的护理质量。