Sanz-Cabanillas Juan Luis, Ruano Juan, Gomez-Garcia Francisco, Alcalde-Mellado Patricia, Gay-Mimbrera Jesus, Aguilar-Luque Macarena, Maestre-Lopez Beatriz, Gonzalez-Padilla Marcelino, Carmona-Fernandez Pedro J, Velez Garcia-Nieto Antonio, Isla-Tejera Beatriz
Department of Dermatology, Reina Sofia University Hospital, Cordoba, Spain.
Instituto Maimonides de Investigacion Biomedica de Cordoba (IMIBIC)/Reina Sofia University Hospital/University of Cordoba, Cordoba, Spain.
PLoS One. 2017 Apr 12;12(4):e0175419. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0175419. eCollection 2017.
Moderate-to-severe psoriasis is associated with significant comorbidity, an impaired quality of life, and increased medical costs, including those associated with treatments. Systematic reviews (SRs) and meta-analyses (MAs) of randomized clinical trials are considered two of the best approaches to the summarization of high-quality evidence. However, methodological bias can reduce the validity of conclusions from these types of studies and subsequently impair the quality of decision making. As co-authorship is among the most well-documented forms of research collaboration, the present study aimed to explore whether authors' collaboration methods might influence the methodological quality of SRs and MAs of psoriasis. Methodological quality was assessed by two raters who extracted information from full articles. After calculating total and per-item Assessment of Multiple Systematic Reviews (AMSTAR) scores, reviews were classified as low (0-4), medium (5-8), or high (9-11) quality. Article metadata and journal-related bibliometric indices were also obtained. A total of 741 authors from 520 different institutions and 32 countries published 220 reviews that were classified as high (17.2%), moderate (55%), or low (27.7%) methodological quality. The high methodological quality subnetwork was larger but had a lower connection density than the low and moderate methodological quality subnetworks; specifically, the former contained relatively fewer nodes (authors and reviews), reviews by authors, and collaborators per author. Furthermore, the high methodological quality subnetwork was highly compartmentalized, with several modules representing few poorly interconnected communities. In conclusion, structural differences in author-paper affiliation network may influence the methodological quality of SRs and MAs on psoriasis. As the author-paper affiliation network structure affects study quality in this research field, authors who maintain an appropriate balance between scientific quality and productivity are more likely to develop higher quality reviews.
中重度银屑病与显著的合并症、生活质量受损以及医疗成本增加(包括与治疗相关的成本)相关。随机临床试验的系统评价(SRs)和荟萃分析(MAs)被认为是总结高质量证据的两种最佳方法。然而,方法学偏倚可能会降低这类研究结论的有效性,进而损害决策质量。由于共同作者身份是研究合作中记录最完善的形式之一,本研究旨在探讨作者的合作方式是否可能影响银屑病SRs和MAs的方法学质量。两名评分者从全文中提取信息来评估方法学质量。在计算多个系统评价的总体和单项评估(AMSTAR)分数后,将评价分为低质量(0 - 4分)、中等质量(5 - 8分)或高质量(9 - 11分)。还获取了文章元数据和期刊相关的文献计量指标。来自32个国家520个不同机构的741名作者发表了220篇评价,这些评价被分类为高质量(17.2%)、中等质量(55%)或低质量(27.7%)的方法学质量。高质量方法学子网更大,但与低质量和中等质量方法学子网相比连接密度更低;具体而言,前者包含的节点(作者和评价)、作者的评价以及每位作者的合作者相对较少。此外,高质量方法学子网高度分化,有几个模块代表少数联系不佳的群落。总之,作者 - 论文归属网络的结构差异可能会影响银屑病SRs和MAs的方法学质量。由于作者 - 论文归属网络结构影响该研究领域的研究质量,在科学质量和生产力之间保持适当平衡的作者更有可能开展更高质量的评价。