Jefferson Health System/3B Orthopaedic Clinic, 601 Walnut St, Philadelphia, PA, 19106, USA.
Mount Sinai Health System, 1 Gustave L. Levy Place, New York, NY, 10029, USA.
Int Orthop. 2019 Aug;43(8):1865-1871. doi: 10.1007/s00264-018-4175-5. Epub 2018 Oct 5.
Robotic-assisted unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (UKA) has gained popularity over the last decade claiming enhanced surgical precision and better joint kinematics, with peer-reviewed publications about this new technology also increasing over the past few years. The purpose of our study was to compare manuscripts about robotic-assisted UKA to those about standard UKA in terms of industry funding, author conflict of interest, scientific quality, and bibliometrics.
A systematic search using PRISMA guidelines on PubMed and Google Scholar from 2012 to 2016 resulted in 45 papers where robotic technology was performed for UKA and 167 papers that UKA were performed without the assistance of a robot. Between the two groups, we compared (1) rate of manuscripts with reported conflict of interest or industry funding, (2) journal impact factor, (3) level of evidence, and (4) relative citation ratio.
Fifty-one percent (23/45) of robotic UKA manuscripts were industry-funded or had authors with financial conflict of interest, compared to 29% ([49/167], p < 0.01) of non-robotic UKA papers. Significantly more robotic UKA papers (24% [11/45] vs 9% [16/167), p < 0.01) were published in journals that were not assigned an impact factor by the Journal Citations Report. There was no difference in regard to bibliometrics or level of evidence.
Manuscripts in which UKA was performed with the assistance of a robot were more likely to be industry funded or be written by authors with financial conflicts of interest and published in less prestigious journals. There were no differences in scientific quality or influence between the two groups. Readers analyzing published data should be aware of the potential conflicts of interests in order to more accurately interpret manuscripts data and conclusions.
在过去十年中,机器人辅助单髁膝关节置换术(UKA)越来越受欢迎,据称其具有更高的手术精度和更好的关节运动学效果,有关这项新技术的同行评审出版物也在过去几年中有所增加。我们的研究目的是比较机器人辅助 UKA 与标准 UKA 的手稿,评估其在行业资助、作者利益冲突、科学质量和文献计量学方面的差异。
使用 PRISMA 指南,在 PubMed 和 Google Scholar 上进行系统检索,检索年限为 2012 年至 2016 年,共获得 45 篇关于机器人辅助 UKA 的论文和 167 篇未使用机器人辅助的 UKA 论文。在这两组之间,我们比较了(1)报告利益冲突或行业资助的手稿比例,(2)期刊影响因子,(3)证据水平,以及(4)相对引用率。
51%(23/45)的机器人 UKA 手稿由行业资助或作者存在财务利益冲突,而在非机器人 UKA 论文中,这一比例为 29%(49/167)(p<0.01)。明显更多的机器人 UKA 论文(24% [11/45] 与 9% [16/167],p<0.01)发表在未被《期刊引证报告》赋予影响因子的期刊上。在文献计量学或证据水平方面没有差异。
在机器人辅助下进行 UKA 的论文更有可能获得行业资助,或者由存在财务利益冲突的作者撰写,并发表在声望较低的期刊上。两组之间在科学质量或影响力方面没有差异。分析已发表数据的读者应意识到潜在的利益冲突,以便更准确地解释手稿数据和结论。