Faculty of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
Department of Radiology, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
Eur Radiol. 2019 Apr;29(4):1657-1664. doi: 10.1007/s00330-018-5801-8. Epub 2018 Nov 15.
To assess the risk of citation bias in imaging diagnostic accuracy research by evaluating whether studies with higher accuracy estimates are cited more frequently than those with lower accuracy estimates.
We searched Medline for diagnostic accuracy meta-analyses published in imaging journals from January 2005 to April 2016. Primary studies from the meta-analyses were screened; those assessing the diagnostic accuracy of an imaging test and reporting sensitivity and specificity were eligible for inclusion. Studies not indexed in Web of Science, duplicates, and inaccessible articles were excluded. Topic (modality/subspecialty), study design, sample size, journal impact factor, publication date, times cited, sensitivity, and specificity were extracted for each study. Negative binomial regression was performed to evaluate the association of citation rate (times cited per month since publication) with Youden's index (sensitivity + specificity -1), highest sensitivity, and highest specificity, controlling for the potential confounding effects of modality, subspecialty, impact factor, study design, sample size, and source meta-analysis.
There were 1016 primary studies included. A positive association between Youden's index and citation rate was present, with a regression coefficient of 0.33 (p = 0.016). The regression coefficient for sensitivity was 0.41 (p = 0.034), and for specificity, 0.32 (p = 0.15).
A positive association exists between diagnostic accuracy estimates and citation rates, indicating that there is evidence of citation bias in imaging diagnostic accuracy literature. Overestimation of imaging test accuracy may contribute to patient harm from incorrect interpretation of test results.
• Studies with higher accuracy estimates may be cited more frequently than those with lower accuracy estimates. • This citation bias could lead clinicians, reviews, and clinical practice guidelines to overestimate the accuracy of imaging tests, contributing to patient harm from incorrect interpretation of test results.
通过评估准确性估计值较高的研究是否比准确性估计值较低的研究更频繁地被引用,来评估影像学诊断准确性研究中存在引用偏倚的风险。
我们在 2005 年 1 月至 2016 年 4 月期间从影像学期刊中检索了诊断准确性荟萃分析的 Medline。筛选出荟萃分析中的原始研究,这些研究评估了影像学检查的诊断准确性,并报告了敏感性和特异性,有资格入选。未被 Web of Science 索引、重复和无法获取的文章被排除在外。为每个研究提取了主题(模态/亚专业)、研究设计、样本量、期刊影响因子、发表日期、被引次数、敏感性和特异性。采用负二项回归评估引用率(自发表以来每月的被引次数)与 Youden 指数(敏感性+特异性-1)、最高敏感性和最高特异性之间的关联,控制了模态、亚专业、影响因子、研究设计、样本量和来源荟萃分析的潜在混杂效应。
共纳入 1016 项主要研究。Youden 指数与引用率之间存在正相关,回归系数为 0.33(p=0.016)。敏感性的回归系数为 0.41(p=0.034),特异性的回归系数为 0.32(p=0.15)。
诊断准确性估计值与引用率之间存在正相关,表明影像学诊断准确性文献中存在引用偏倚的证据。影像学检查准确性的高估可能导致因错误解释检查结果而对患者造成伤害。
准确性估计值较高的研究可能比准确性估计值较低的研究更频繁地被引用。
这种引用偏倚可能导致临床医生、综述作者和临床实践指南高估影像学检查的准确性,从而导致因错误解释检查结果而对患者造成伤害。