Department of Surgery, Clinical Science Institute, National University of Ireland Galway, Galway, Ireland.
PLoS One. 2010 Nov 9;5(11):e13902. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0013902.
There exists a lack of knowledge regarding the quantity and quality of scientific yield in relation to individual cancer types. We aimed to measure the proportion, quality and relevance of oncology-related articles, and to relate this output to their associated disease burden. By incorporating the impact factor(IF) and Eigenfactor™(EF) into our analysis we also assessed the relationship between these indices and the output under study.
All publications in 2007 were retrieved for the 26 most common cancers. The top 20 journals ranked by IF and EF in general medicine and oncology, and the presence of each malignancy within these titles was analysed. Journals publishing most prolifically on each cancer were identified and their impact assessed.
63260 (PubMed) and 126845 (WoS) entries were generated, respectively. 26 neoplasms accounted for 25% of total output from the top medical publications. 5 cancers dominated the first quartile of output in the top oncology journals; breast, prostate, lung, and intestinal cancer, and leukaemia. Journals associated with these cancers were associated with much higher IFs and EFs than those journals associated with the other cancer types under study, although these measures were not equivalent across all sub-specialties. In addition, yield on each cancer was related to its disease burden as measured by its incidence and prevalence.
Oncology enjoys disproportionate representation in the more prestigious medical journals. 5 cancers dominate yield, although this attention is justified given their associated disease burden. The commonly used IF and the recently introduced EF do not correlate in the assessment of the preeminent oncology journals, nor at the level of individual malignancies; there is a need to delineate between proxy measures of quality and the relevance of output when assessing its merit. These results raise significant questions regarding the best method of assessment of research and scientific output in the field of oncology.
目前缺乏关于个体癌症类型的科学产出数量和质量的知识。我们旨在衡量与肿瘤学相关的文章的比例、质量和相关性,并将其与相关疾病负担联系起来。通过将影响因子(IF)和特征因子(EF)纳入我们的分析,我们还评估了这些指标与所研究的产出之间的关系。
检索了 2007 年 26 种最常见癌症的所有出版物。分析了综合医学和肿瘤学中 IF 和 EF 排名前 20 的期刊,以及这些期刊中每种恶性肿瘤的存在情况。确定了发表每种癌症最多的期刊,并评估了它们的影响力。
PubMed 产生了 63260 条记录,WoS 产生了 126845 条记录。26 种肿瘤占顶级医学出版物总产出的 25%。在顶级肿瘤学期刊中,前四分之一的产出主要集中在 5 种癌症上,即乳腺癌、前列腺癌、肺癌、肠癌和白血病。与这些癌症相关的期刊与研究中其他癌症类型的期刊相比,具有更高的 IF 和 EF,尽管在所有亚专业中这些指标并不相同。此外,每种癌症的产量与其疾病负担(由发病率和患病率衡量)有关。
肿瘤学在更有声望的医学期刊中得到了不成比例的代表。5 种癌症主导着产出,尽管考虑到它们的相关疾病负担,这种关注是合理的。常用的 IF 和新引入的 EF 在评估卓越的肿瘤学期刊时并不相关,也不在个体恶性肿瘤的水平上相关;在评估其价值时,需要区分质量的替代指标和产出的相关性。这些结果对评估肿瘤学领域的研究和科学产出的最佳方法提出了重大质疑。