Squitieri Lee, Petruska Elizabeth, Chung Kevin C
Section of Plastic Surgery, Department of Surgery, The University of Michigan Health System, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-0340, USA.
J Hand Surg Am. 2010 Mar;35(3):359-367.e5. doi: 10.1016/j.jhsa.2009.12.003.
Kienböck's disease is considered rare and currently affects fewer than 200,000 people in the United States. Given the inherent challenges associated with researching rare diseases, the intense effort in hand surgery to treat this uncommon disorder may be influenced by publication bias in which positive outcomes are preferentially published. The specific aim of this project was to conduct a systematic review of the literature with the hypothesis that publication bias is present for the treatment of Kienböck's disease.
We conducted a systematic review of all available abstracts associated with published manuscripts (English and non-English) and abstracts accepted to the 1992 to 2004 American Society for Surgery of the Hand (ASSH) annual meetings. Data collection included various study characteristics, direction of outcome (positive, neutral/negative), complication rates, mean follow-up time, time to publication, and length of patient enrollment.
Our study included 175 (124 English, 51 non-English) published manuscripts and 14 abstracts from the 1992 to 2004 annual ASSH meetings. Abstracts from published manuscripts were associated with a 53% positive outcome rate, which is lower than the 74% positive outcome rate found among other surgically treated disorders. Over the past 40 years, studies have become more positive (36% to 68%, p=.007) and are more likely to incorporate statistical analysis testing (0% to 55%, p<.001). Of the 14 abstracts accepted to ASSH, 11 were published in peer-reviewed journals. Ten of the 14 accepted abstracts were considered positive, and there was no significant difference in publication rate between studies with positive (n = 10) and negative (n = 4) outcomes (p>.999).
The acceptance rate for negative outcomes studies regarding Kienböck's disease is higher than for other surgical disorders. This may indicate a relative decrease in positive outcome bias among published Kienböck's disease studies compared with other surgical disorders. However, the increasing positive outcome rate for published Kienböck's disease studies over time may suggest a trend of increasing publication bias among journals toward Kienböck's disease studies.
肯博克病被认为较为罕见,目前在美国受其影响的人数不到20万。鉴于研究罕见病存在诸多固有挑战,手外科领域为治疗这种罕见病症所付出的巨大努力可能会受到发表偏倚的影响,即阳性结果更倾向于被发表。本项目的具体目标是对文献进行系统综述,以验证关于肯博克病治疗存在发表偏倚这一假设。
我们对与已发表手稿(英文和非英文)以及1992年至2004年美国手外科学会(ASSH)年会所接收的摘要相关的所有可用摘要进行了系统综述。数据收集包括各种研究特征、结果方向(阳性、中性/阴性)、并发症发生率、平均随访时间、发表时间以及患者入组时长。
我们的研究纳入了175篇(124篇英文、51篇非英文)已发表手稿以及1992年至2004年ASSH年会的14篇摘要。已发表手稿的摘要中阳性结果率为53%,低于其他外科治疗疾病中发现的74%的阳性结果率。在过去40年里,研究结果变得更趋阳性(36%至68%,p = 0.007),并且更有可能纳入统计分析检验(0%至55%,p < 0.001)。在被ASSH接收的14篇摘要中,有11篇发表在同行评审期刊上。14篇被接收的摘要中有10篇被认为是阳性结果,阳性结果(n = 10)和阴性结果(n = 4)的研究在发表率上没有显著差异(p > 0.999)。
关于肯博克病的阴性结果研究的接受率高于其他外科疾病。这可能表明与其他外科疾病相比,已发表的肯博克病研究中阳性结果偏倚相对减少。然而,随着时间推移,已发表的肯博克病研究中阳性结果率不断上升,这可能表明期刊对肯博克病研究的发表偏倚有增加的趋势。