Gewandter Jennifer S, McKeown Andrew, McDermott Michael P, Dworkin Jordan D, Smith Shannon M, Gross Robert A, Hunsinger Matthew, Lin Allison H, Rappaport Bob A, Rice Andrew S C, Rowbotham Michael C, Williams Mark R, Turk Dennis C, Dworkin Robert H
Department of Anesthesiology, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, New York.
Department of Anesthesiology, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, New York.
J Pain. 2015 Jan;16(1):3-10. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2014.10.003. Epub 2014 Oct 23.
Peer-reviewed publications of randomized clinical trials (RCTs) are the primary means of disseminating research findings. "Spin" in RCT publications is misrepresentation of statistically nonsignificant research findings to suggest treatment benefit. Spin can influence the way readers interpret clinical trials and use the information to make decisions about treatments and medical policies. The objective of this study was to determine the frequency with which 4 types of spin were used in publications of analgesic RCTs with nonsignificant primary analyses in 6 major pain journals. In the 76 articles included in our sample, 28% of the abstracts and 29% of the main texts emphasized secondary analyses with P values <.05; 22% of abstracts and 29% of texts emphasized treatment benefit based on nonsignificant primary results; 14% of abstracts and 18% of texts emphasized within-group improvements over time, rather than primary between-group comparisons; and 13% of abstracts and 10% of texts interpreted a nonsignificant difference between groups in a superiority study as comparable effectiveness. When considering the article conclusion sections, 21% did not mention the nonsignificant primary result, 22% were presented with no uncertainty or qualification, 30% did not acknowledge that future research was required, and 8% recommended the intervention for clinical use.
This article identifies relatively frequent "spin" in analgesic RCTs. These findings highlight a need for authors, reviewers, and editors to be more cognizant of how analgesic RCT results are presented and attempt to minimize spin in future clinical trial publications.
同行评审的随机临床试验(RCT)出版物是传播研究结果的主要手段。RCT出版物中的“夸大”是对统计学上无显著意义的研究结果进行错误表述,以暗示治疗益处。夸大可能会影响读者解读临床试验的方式,并利用这些信息来做出关于治疗和医疗政策的决策。本研究的目的是确定在6种主要疼痛期刊上发表的主要分析无显著意义的镇痛RCT出版物中使用4种夸大类型的频率。在我们样本中的76篇文章中,28%的摘要和29%的正文强调了P值<.05的次要分析;22%的摘要和29%的正文基于无显著意义的主要结果强调治疗益处;14%的摘要和18%的正文强调组内随时间的改善,而非主要的组间比较;13%的摘要和10%的正文将优效性研究中组间的无显著差异解释为疗效相当。在考虑文章结论部分时,21%未提及无显著意义的主要结果,22%的呈现没有不确定性或限定条件,30%未承认需要未来研究,8%推荐该干预措施用于临床。
本文识别出镇痛RCT中相对常见的“夸大”情况。这些发现凸显了作者、审稿人和编辑需要更加认识到镇痛RCT结果的呈现方式,并努力在未来的临床试验出版物中尽量减少夸大。