Harriman Stephanie L, Patel Jigisha
BioMed Central, 236 Gray's Inn Road, London, WC1X 8HB, UK.
Trials. 2016 Apr 15;17:187. doi: 10.1186/s13063-016-1310-8.
Due to problems of publication bias and selective reporting, the ICMJE requires prospective registration of all clinical trials with an appropriate registry before the first participant is enrolled. Previous research has shown that not all clinical trials are registered at this time (prospectively). This study investigated the extent and timing of trial registration. The aims were to determine 1) the proportion of clinical trials that were registered prospectively or retrospectively and 2) when retrospective registration took place in relation to submission to the journal in which they were published.
All clinical trials published in the BMC series in 2013 were identified. All articles that met the study's inclusion criteria were categorised into one of three categories: 1) prospectively registered, 2) retrospectively registered before submission to the journal in which they were published or 3) retrospectively registered after submission to the journal in which they were published.
One hundred and eight eligible studies were identified. Of these, 33 (31 %) reported studies that were registered prospectively, 72 reported studies that were registered retrospectively (67 %) and three articles (3 %) did not include a trial registration number. Of the 72 studies that were registered retrospectively, 66 (92 %) were registered before the article was submitted to the journal and six (8 %) were registered after the article was submitted to the journal.
Ten years after the ICMJE requirements for prospective registration of clinical trials this study found that the majority of included clinical trials were registered retrospectively but before submission to a journal for publication. This highlights the need for organisations other than journals, such as research institutions and grant giving bodies, to be more involved in enforcing prospective trial registration.
由于发表偏倚和选择性报告的问题,国际医学期刊编辑委员会(ICMJE)要求所有临床试验在招募第一名参与者之前,需在适当的注册机构进行前瞻性注册。先前的研究表明,并非所有临床试验都在此时(前瞻性地)进行注册。本研究调查了试验注册的程度和时间。目的是确定:1)前瞻性或回顾性注册的临床试验比例;2)回顾性注册相对于在其发表期刊投稿的时间。
确定2013年发表在BMC系列中的所有临床试验。所有符合研究纳入标准的文章被分为三类之一:1)前瞻性注册;2)在向其发表期刊投稿之前进行回顾性注册;3)在向其发表期刊投稿之后进行回顾性注册。
共识别出108项符合条件的研究。其中,33项(31%)报告的研究为前瞻性注册,72项报告的研究为回顾性注册(67%),3篇文章(3%)未包含试验注册号。在72项回顾性注册的研究中,66项(92%)在文章提交给期刊之前进行了注册,6项(8%)在文章提交给期刊之后进行了注册。
ICMJE对临床试验前瞻性注册提出要求十年后,本研究发现,大多数纳入的临床试验是回顾性注册,但在提交给期刊发表之前。这凸显了除期刊之外的其他组织,如研究机构和资助机构,需要更多地参与执行前瞻性试验注册。