Department of Health Research Methods, Evidence, and Impact, McMaster University, St. Joseph's Healthcare, Hamilton, 501-25 Charlton Avenue East, Hamilton, ON, L8N 1Y2, Canada.
St. Joseph's Healthcare Hamilton, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada.
BMC Med Res Methodol. 2018 Jan 11;18(1):9. doi: 10.1186/s12874-017-0465-7.
Prospective study protocols and registrations can play a significant role in reducing incomplete or selective reporting of primary biomedical research, because they are pre-specified blueprints which are available for the evaluation of, and comparison with, full reports. However, inconsistencies between protocols or registrations and full reports have been frequently documented. In this systematic review, which forms part of our series on the state of reporting of primary biomedical, we aimed to survey the existing evidence of inconsistencies between protocols or registrations (i.e., what was planned to be done and/or what was actually done) and full reports (i.e., what was reported in the literature); this was based on findings from systematic reviews and surveys in the literature.
Electronic databases, including CINAHL, MEDLINE, Web of Science, and EMBASE, were searched to identify eligible surveys and systematic reviews. Our primary outcome was the level of inconsistency (expressed as a percentage, with higher percentages indicating greater inconsistency) between protocols or registration and full reports. We summarized the findings from the included systematic reviews and surveys qualitatively.
There were 37 studies (33 surveys and 4 systematic reviews) included in our analyses. Most studies (n = 36) compared protocols or registrations with full reports in clinical trials, while a single survey focused on primary studies of clinical trials and observational research. High inconsistency levels were found in outcome reporting (ranging from 14% to 100%), subgroup reporting (from 12% to 100%), statistical analyses (from 9% to 47%), and other measure comparisons. Some factors, such as outcomes with significant results, sponsorship, type of outcome and disease speciality were reported to be significantly related to inconsistent reporting.
We found that inconsistent reporting between protocols or registrations and full reports of primary biomedical research is frequent, prevalent and suboptimal. We also identified methodological issues such as the need for consensus on measuring inconsistency across sources for trial reports, and more studies evaluating transparency and reproducibility in reporting all aspects of study design and analysis. A joint effort involving authors, journals, sponsors, regulators and research ethics committees is required to solve this problem.
前瞻性研究方案和注册可以在减少主要生物医学研究不完全或选择性报告方面发挥重要作用,因为它们是预先规定的蓝图,可用于评估和比较完整报告。然而,方案或注册与完整报告之间的不一致情况经常被记录下来。在本系统评价中,我们旨在调查方案或注册(即计划完成的内容和/或实际完成的内容)与完整报告(即文献中报告的内容)之间现有证据的不一致情况,这是基于文献中的系统评价和调查结果。
电子数据库,包括 CINAHL、MEDLINE、Web of Science 和 EMBASE,用于查找合格的调查和系统评价。我们的主要结果是方案或注册与完整报告之间的不一致程度(以百分比表示,百分比越高表示不一致程度越高)。我们对纳入的系统评价和调查进行了定性总结。
我们的分析共纳入了 37 项研究(33 项调查和 4 项系统评价)。大多数研究(n=36)比较了临床试验中的方案或注册与完整报告,而仅有一项调查专注于临床试验和观察性研究的主要研究。结果报告(从 14%到 100%)、亚组报告(从 12%到 100%)、统计分析(从 9%到 47%)和其他措施比较的不一致程度较高。一些因素,如具有显著结果的结局、赞助、结局类型和疾病专业,被报道与不一致报告显著相关。
我们发现主要生物医学研究的方案或注册与完整报告之间的不一致报告频繁、普遍且不理想。我们还确定了一些方法学问题,例如需要就衡量试验报告中不同来源之间的不一致性达成共识,以及更多研究评估报告研究设计和分析各个方面的透明度和可重复性。需要作者、期刊、赞助商、监管机构和研究伦理委员会共同努力解决这个问题。