Department of Internal Medicine, Institut d'Investigacions Biomèdiques August Pi i Sunyer (IDIBAPS), Hospital Clínic, University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
Eur J Clin Invest. 2013 Jul;43(7):660-7. doi: 10.1111/eci.12090. Epub 2013 Apr 1.
To assess financial, nonfinancial and editors' conflicts of interest (COI) disclosure policies among the most influential biomedical journals publishing original research.
We conducted a cross-sectional study of 399 high-impact biomedical journals in 27 biomedical categories of the Journal Citation Reports (JCR) in December 2011. Information relevant to COI and requirements for disclosures that was publicly available on journal websites was collected.
While financial COI disclosures were required by 358 (89.7%) and nonfinancial by 280 (70.2%) journals, 155 (38.8%) required editors' disclosures. Journals in the first decile of the JCR classification scored significantly higher than those in the second decile for all disclosure policies. Ninety (22.6%) journals were published by Elsevier and 59 (14.8%) by Wiley-Blackwell, with Elsevier scoring significantly better in financial disclosure policies (P = 0.022). Clinical journals scored significantly higher than basic journals for all disclosure policies. No differences were observed between open-access (n = 25) and nonopen-access (n = 374) journals for any type of disclosure. Somewhat incoherently, authors' disclosure statements were included in some published manuscript in 57.1% of journals without any COI disclosure policies.
Authors' financial COI disclosures were required by about 90% of high-impact clinical and basic journals publishing original research. Unlike recent studies showing a significantly lower prevalence of nonfinancial compared with financial disclosures, the former were required by about 70% of journals, suggesting that editors are increasingly concerned about nonfinancial competing interests. Only 40% of journals required disclosure of editors' COI, in conflict with the recommendations of the most influential editors' associations.
评估发表原创研究的最有影响力的生物医学期刊在财务、非财务和编辑利益冲突(COI)披露政策方面的情况。
我们于 2011 年 12 月对《期刊引证报告》(JCR)27 个生物医学类别中的 399 种高影响力生物医学期刊进行了横断面研究。收集了期刊网站上公开的与 COI 及披露要求相关的信息。
358 种(89.7%)期刊要求披露财务 COI,280 种(70.2%)期刊要求披露非财务 COI,但仅 155 种(38.8%)期刊要求披露编辑 COI。在 JCR 分类的前十分位中,所有披露政策的评分均显著高于后十分位。90 种(22.6%)期刊由爱思唯尔出版,59 种(14.8%)由威立出版,在财务披露政策方面,爱思唯尔得分明显更高(P = 0.022)。临床期刊在所有披露政策方面的得分均显著高于基础期刊。在任何类型的披露中,开放获取(n = 25)和非开放获取(n = 374)期刊之间均无差异。在没有任何 COI 披露政策的情况下,57.1%的期刊将作者的披露声明纳入部分已发表的手稿中,这有点不一致。
发表原创研究的高影响力临床和基础期刊约有 90%要求作者披露财务 COI。与最近的研究显示财务披露的比例明显低于非财务披露不同,前者有 70%左右的期刊要求,这表明编辑越来越关注非财务利益冲突。仅有 40%的期刊要求披露编辑的 COI,这与最有影响力的编辑协会的建议相冲突。