Department of Surgical Oncology, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas.
Office of Postdoctoral Affairs, Moffitt Cancer Center, Tampa, Florida.
Clin Cancer Res. 2018 Jul 15;24(14):3447-3455. doi: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-18-0227. Epub 2018 Apr 11.
The successful translation of laboratory research into effective therapies is dependent upon the validity of peer-reviewed publications. However, several publications in recent years suggested that published scientific findings could be reproduced only 11% to 45% of the time. Multiple surveys attempted to elucidate the fundamental causes of data irreproducibility and underscored potential solutions, more robust experimental designs, better statistics, and better mentorship. However, no prior survey has addressed the role of the review and publication process on honest reporting. We developed an anonymous online survey intended for trainees involved in bench research. The survey included questions related to mentoring/career development, research practice, integrity, and transparency, and how the pressure to publish and the publication process itself influence their reporting practices. Responses to questions related to mentoring and training practices were largely positive, although an average of approximately 25% did not seem to receive optimal mentoring. A total of 39.2% revealed having been pressured by a principle investigator or collaborator to produce "positive" data. About 62.8% admitted that the pressure to publish influences the way they report data. The majority of respondents did not believe that extensive revisions significantly improved the manuscript while adding to the cost and time invested. This survey indicates that trainees believe that the pressure to publish affects honest reporting, mostly emanating from our system of rewards and advancement. The publication process itself affects faculty and trainees and appears to influence a shift in their ethics from honest reporting ("negative data") to selective reporting, data falsification, or even fabrication. .
实验室研究向有效治疗的成功转化取决于同行评审出版物的有效性。然而,近年来有几篇出版物表明,已发表的科学发现只能被重复验证 11%到 45%。多项调查试图阐明数据不可重现的根本原因,并强调了潜在的解决方案,包括更稳健的实验设计、更好的统计方法和更好的指导。然而,以前没有调查涉及审查和出版过程对诚实报告的影响。我们开发了一项针对从事基础研究的受训者的匿名在线调查。该调查包括与指导/职业发展、研究实践、诚信和透明度相关的问题,以及发表压力和出版过程本身如何影响他们的报告实践。与指导和培训实践相关的问题的回答在很大程度上是积极的,尽管平均约有 25%的人似乎没有得到最佳的指导。总共有 39.2%的人透露,他们曾受到主要研究员或合作者的压力,要求他们产生“积极”的数据。约 62.8%的人承认发表压力影响他们报告数据的方式。大多数受访者认为,广泛的修订并没有显著改善手稿,反而增加了成本和投入的时间。这项调查表明,受训者认为发表压力会影响诚实报告,主要源于我们的奖励和晋升制度。出版过程本身会影响教师和受训者,并似乎影响他们的道德观念从诚实报告(“负面数据”)转变为选择性报告、数据伪造,甚至捏造。