Advanced Cardiovascular Imaging, NIHR Cardiovascular Biomedical Research Unit at Barts, William Harvey Research Institute, Queen Mary University of London, London, UK.
Department of Clinical Radiology, University of Munich, Munich, Germany.
Eur Heart J Cardiovasc Imaging. 2014 Jun;15(6):691-700. doi: 10.1093/ehjci/jet277. Epub 2014 Jan 23.
Diagnostic accuracy studies determine the clinical value of non-invasive cardiac imaging tests. The 'STAndards for the Reporting of Diagnostic accuracy studies' (STARD) were published in 2003 to improve the quality of study reporting. We aimed to assess the reporting quality of cardiac computed tomography (CCT), single positron emission computed tomography (SPECT), and cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) diagnostic accuracy studies; to evaluate the impact of STARD; and to investigate the relationships between reporting quality, journal impact factor, and study citation index.
We randomly generated six groups of 50 diagnostic accuracy studies: 'CMR 1995-2002', 'CMR 2004-11', 'CCT 1995-2002', 'CCT 2004-11', 'SPECT 1995-2002', and 'SPECT 2004-11'. The 300 studies were double-read by two blinded reviewers and reporting quality determined by % adherence to the 25 STARD criteria. Reporting quality increased from 65.3% before STARD to 74.1% after (P = 0.003) in CMR studies and from 61.6 to 79.0% (P < 0.001) in CCT studies. SPECT studies showed no significant change: 71.9% before and 71.5% after STARD (P = 0.92). Journals advising authors to refer to STARD had significantly higher impact factors than those that did not (P = 0.03), and journals with above-median impact factors published studies of significantly higher reporting quality (P < 0.001). Since STARD, citation index has not significantly increased (P = 0.14), but, after adjustment for impact factor, reporting quality continues to increase by ∼1.5% each year.
Reporting standards for diagnostic accuracy studies of non-invasive cardiac imaging are at most satisfactory and have improved since the introduction of STARD. Adherence to STARD should be mandatory for authors of diagnostic accuracy studies.
诊断准确性研究确定了无创性心脏成像检查的临床价值。《诊断准确性研究报告的标准》(STARD)于 2003 年发布,旨在提高研究报告的质量。我们旨在评估心脏计算机断层扫描(CCT)、单光子发射计算机断层扫描(SPECT)和心脏磁共振(CMR)诊断准确性研究的报告质量;评估 STARD 的影响;并研究报告质量、期刊影响因子和研究引文索引之间的关系。
我们随机生成了六组 50 项诊断准确性研究:“CMR 1995-2002”、“CMR 2004-11”、“CCT 1995-2002”、“CCT 2004-11”、“SPECT 1995-2002”和“SPECT 2004-11”。这 300 项研究由两名盲审员进行了双次阅读,并根据 25 项 STARD 标准的遵守程度确定了报告质量的%。CMR 研究的报告质量从 STARD 前的 65.3%提高到 STARD 后的 74.1%(P = 0.003),CCT 研究的报告质量从 61.6%提高到 79.0%(P < 0.001)。SPECT 研究没有显著变化:STARD 前为 71.9%,STARD 后为 71.5%(P = 0.92)。建议作者参考 STARD 的期刊的影响因子明显高于不建议的期刊(P = 0.03),且影响因子高于中位数的期刊发表的研究报告质量明显更高(P < 0.001)。自 STARD 发布以来,引文索引没有显著增加(P = 0.14),但在调整影响因子后,报告质量每年仍以约 1.5%的速度增加。
非侵入性心脏成像诊断准确性研究的报告标准最多只能达到满意水平,并且自 STARD 发布以来有所提高。诊断准确性研究的作者应遵守 STARD。