Wyler von Ballmoos Moritz C, Ware James H, Haring Bernhard
Department of Surgery & Division of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, 53232 WI, USA.
Department of Biostatistics, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, 02115 MA, USA.
J Clin Med Res. 2015 Jun;7(6):428-34. doi: 10.14740/jocmr2115w. Epub 2015 Apr 8.
Multiple classifications have been developed that classify the medical literature into different levels of evidence to facilitate the evaluation of study results and practice of evidence-based medicine. The suggested hierarchies of evidence are generally based on the type of study design; randomized, controlled clinical trials constitute the top level of evidence while case reports rank the lowest among epidemiologic study designs. However, little is known about the frequency with which different study designs appear in the medical literature overall. The purpose of this study was to describe trends in the frequency of reports of randomized control trials (RCTs) as compared to other study designs in the medical literature over two decades.
Data about the prevalence of various types of study designs in the medical literature over the last two decades (years 1990 - 2009) were abstracted from PubMed, validated and subjected to cross-sectional and longitudinal analysis.
In the last 20 years, the annual rate of publication of journal articles has more than doubled. During this period, the percentage of observational studies increased from 29.9% to 40.5%, the percentage of reports of RCTs increased minimally, and there was a striking decline in the percentage of case reports (from 49.8% to 33.6%) in the medical literature overall. In contrast, in three selected, highly cited medical journals, the percentage of reports of RCTs increased by almost 10%. Surprisingly, the percentage of articles classified as case reports also increased (from 36.3% to 43.8%) in these three journals, while the percentage of reports of cohort and case-control studies decreased.
Though the relative frequency of reports from RCTs has not changed substantially in the last 20 years, cohort studies and case-control studies have largely supplanted simple case reports. In contrast, in high impact journals, the representation of RCTs and case reports has increased, with corresponding declines in reports based on other study designs. Further research will be needed to determine whether those trends in publication have resulted in more robust evidence and faster advancement of medical knowledge.
已经开发出多种分类方法,将医学文献分类为不同的证据级别,以促进研究结果的评估和循证医学的实践。建议的证据等级通常基于研究设计的类型;随机对照临床试验构成最高级别的证据,而病例报告在流行病学研究设计中排名最低。然而,对于不同研究设计在总体医学文献中出现的频率知之甚少。本研究的目的是描述过去二十年来医学文献中随机对照试验(RCT)报告频率与其他研究设计相比的趋势。
从PubMed中提取过去二十年(1990 - 2009年)医学文献中各种研究设计的流行数据,进行验证并进行横断面和纵向分析。
在过去20年中,期刊文章的年发表率增加了一倍多。在此期间,观察性研究的百分比从29.9%增加到40.5%,RCT报告的百分比略有增加,而总体医学文献中病例报告的百分比显著下降(从49.8%降至33.6%)。相比之下,在三本选定的、被高度引用的医学期刊中,RCT报告的百分比增加了近10%。令人惊讶的是,在这三本期刊中,被归类为病例报告的文章百分比也增加了(从36.3%增至43.8%),而队列研究和病例对照研究报告的百分比下降。
尽管过去20年中RCT报告的相对频率没有实质性变化,但队列研究和病例对照研究在很大程度上取代了简单的病例报告。相比之下,在高影响力期刊中,RCT和病例报告的占比增加,而基于其他研究设计的报告相应减少。需要进一步研究以确定这些发表趋势是否带来了更有力的证据以及医学知识的更快进步。