Kay Jeffrey, Memon Muzammil, de Sa Darren, Duong Andrew, Simunovic Nicole, Ayeni Olufemi R
Michael G. DeGroote School of Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
Division of Orthopaedic Surgery, Department of Surgery, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
Arthroscopy. 2017 Jan;33(1):12-18. doi: 10.1016/j.arthro.2016.05.032. Epub 2016 Jul 21.
The purpose of this study was to determine the proportion of paper (podium) presentations at the 2006-2010 Arthroscopy Association of North America (AANA) annual scientific meetings that were ultimately published in a peer-reviewed journal. Furthermore, we aimed to evaluate whether the level of evidence correlated with the publication rate of these presentations or the impact factor (IF) of the publishing journal.
Paper presentations from the 2006-2010 AANA annual meetings were included for evaluation. Clinical studies were graded for quality using the level of evidence by 2 independent reviewers. A comprehensive strategy was used to search the databases PubMed, Medline, and Embase for publications in scientific journals that corresponded to the presentations and were published within 5 years of the presentation date.
Three hundred twenty-eight presentations were evaluated. Overall, 179 peer-reviewed publications corresponding to particular meeting presentations were identified, for a 5-year publication rate of 55%. There was no correlation between the publication rate and the level of evidence (P = .836), the type of study (P = .628), or the joint of focus (P = .07) of the presentations. The mean IF of journals that published Level I studies (4.8 [standard error, 2.3]) was significantly higher than the mean IF of journals that published Level II, III, or IV studies (2.58 [standard error, 0.10]) (P = .017).
Between 2006 and 2010, presentations of the highest level of evidence at AANA meetings were subsequently published at a similar rate to presentations of lower levels of evidence, albeit in journals with higher IFs.
This study is an important initial evaluation of the ultimate clinical impact of AANA meeting presentations. The study type, joint of focus, and level of evidence of the presentations all had no correlation with the rate at which these presentations were ultimately published.
本研究旨在确定在2006 - 2010年北美关节镜协会(AANA)年度科学会议上以纸质(讲台)形式发表的报告最终在同行评审期刊上发表的比例。此外,我们旨在评估证据水平是否与这些报告的发表率或发表期刊的影响因子(IF)相关。
纳入2006 - 2010年AANA年会的纸质报告进行评估。由2名独立评审员根据证据水平对临床研究的质量进行分级。采用综合策略在PubMed、Medline和Embase数据库中搜索与报告相对应且在报告日期后5年内发表在科学期刊上的出版物。
共评估了328份报告。总体而言,确定了179份与特定会议报告相对应的同行评审出版物,5年发表率为55%。报告的发表率与证据水平(P = 0.836)、研究类型(P = 0.628)或重点关注的关节(P = 0.07)之间均无相关性。发表I级研究的期刊的平均IF(4.8[标准误,2.3])显著高于发表II、III或IV级研究的期刊的平均IF(2.58[标准误,0.10])(P = 0.017)。
2006年至2010年期间,AANA会议上证据水平最高的报告随后的发表率与证据水平较低的报告相似,尽管发表在IF较高的期刊上。
本研究是对AANA会议报告最终临床影响的重要初步评估。报告的研究类型、重点关注的关节和证据水平与这些报告最终的发表率均无相关性。