Gantenbein L, Arora P, Navarini A, Brandt O, Mueller S M
Department of Dermatology, University Hospital Basel, Basel, Switzerland.
Department of Dermatology, Dr RML Hospital & Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education & Research (PGIMER), New Delhi, India.
J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol. 2021 Jul;35(7):1424-1433. doi: 10.1111/jdv.17196. Epub 2021 Mar 15.
In the past two centuries, generations of dermatologists around the world have created an enormous number of publications. To our knowledge, no bibliometric analysis of these publications has been performed so far, nor have registered trials been analysed to anticipate future publication trends.
To determine the global distribution of national publication productivity, most published topics, institutions and funding sources contributing most to publications and to anticipate future trends based on registered clinical trials.
Following pre-assessment on PubMed, Embase, Web of Science and Scopus, the number of publications for 'dermatology' was determined for each of 195 countries, normalized per 1 Mio inhabitants and bibliometrically analysed. Dermatology-related trials registered at clinicaltrials.gov were specified by the top-10 diagnoses for the top-10 countries.
The search yielded 1 071 518 publications between 1832 and 2019 with the top-5 diagnoses being melanoma, basal cell carcinoma, psoriasis, pruritus/itch and atopic dermatitis. The top-3 countries with highest absolute numbers of publications were the USA (30.6%), Germany (8.1%) and the UK (8.1%), whereas Switzerland, Denmark and Sweden had the highest publication rates when normalized by inhabitants. The most productive affiliation was the Harvard Medical School, the leading funding source the National Institutes of Health. Currently, maximum number of trials are registered in the USA (8111), France (1543) and Canada (1368). The highest percentage of all dermatology-related trials in a specific country were as follows: Melanoma in the Netherlands (24.8%), psoriasis in Germany (21.7%) and atopic dermatitis in Japan (15.9%).
The top-10 countries including the USA, Canada, a few European and Asian countries contributed more than 3/4 of all publications. The USA hold the dominant leader position both in past publication productivity and currently registered trials. While most Western countries continue to focus their research on the top-10 topics, China and India appear to prioritize their scope towards other topics.
在过去两个世纪里,世界各地几代皮肤科医生发表了大量文献。据我们所知,目前尚未对这些文献进行文献计量分析,也未对注册试验进行分析以预测未来的发表趋势。
确定各国发表产出的全球分布情况、发表最多的主题、对发表贡献最大的机构和资金来源,并根据注册临床试验预测未来趋势。
在对PubMed、Embase、科学网和Scopus进行预评估后,确定了195个国家中每个国家“皮肤病学”的文献数量,按每百万居民进行标准化并进行文献计量分析。在clinicaltrials.gov上注册的与皮肤病学相关的试验,按前10个国家的前10种诊断进行分类。
检索得到1832年至2019年间的1071518篇文献,前5种诊断为黑色素瘤、基底细胞癌、银屑病、瘙痒症和特应性皮炎。文献绝对数量最多的前3个国家是美国(30.6%)、德国(8.1%)和英国(8.1%),而按居民标准化后,瑞士、丹麦和瑞典的发表率最高。产出最多的机构是哈佛医学院,主要资金来源是美国国立卫生研究院。目前,注册试验数量最多的是美国(8111项)、法国(1543项)和加拿大(1368项)。特定国家中所有与皮肤病学相关试验的最高百分比情况如下:荷兰黑色素瘤试验占比(24.8%)、德国银屑病试验占比(21.7%)和日本特应性皮炎试验占比(15.9%)。
包括美国、加拿大以及一些欧洲和亚洲国家在内的前10个国家贡献了超过四分之三的所有文献。美国在过去的发表产出和目前注册的试验方面都占据主导领先地位。虽然大多数西方国家继续将研究重点放在前10个主题上,但中国和印度似乎将研究范围优先放在其他主题上。