Central Library, School of Dental Medicine, University of Belgrade, Belgrade, Serbia.
Department of Pathophysiology, School of Dental Medicine, University of Belgrade, Belgrade, Serbia.
Clin Oral Investig. 2021 Nov;25(11):6171-6183. doi: 10.1007/s00784-021-03916-6. Epub 2021 Apr 6.
The rapid production of a large volume of literature during the early phase of the COVID-19 outbreak created a substantial burden for clinicians and scientists. Therefore, this manuscript aims to identify and describe the scientific literature addressing COVID-19 from a dental research perspective, in terms of the manuscript origin, research domain, study type, and level of evidence (LoE).
Data were retrieved from Web of Science, Scopus, and PubMed. A descriptive analysis of bibliographic data, collaboration network, and keyword co-occurrence analysis were performed. Articles were further classified according to the field of interest, main research question, type of study, and LoE.
The present study identified 296 dental scientific COVID-19 original papers, published in 89 journals, and co-authored by 1331 individuals affiliated with 429 institutions from 53 countries. Although 81.4% were single-country papers, extensive collaboration among the institutions of single countries (Italian, British, and Brazilian institutions) was observed. The main research areas were as follows: the potential use of saliva and other oral fluids as promising samples for COVID-19 testing, dental education, and guidelines for the prevention of COVID-19 transmission in dental practice. The majority of articles were narrative reviews, cross-sectional studies, and short communications. The overall LoE in the analyzed dental literature was low, with only two systematic reviews with the highest LoE I.
The dental literature on the COVID-19 pandemic does not provide data relevant to the evidence-based decision-making process. Future studies with a high LoE are essential to gain precise knowledge on COVID-19 infection within the various fields of Dentistry.
The published dental literature on COVID-19 consists principally of articles with a low level of scientific evidence which do not provide sufficient reliable high-quality evidence that is essential for decision making in clinical dental practice.
COVID-19 爆发初期,大量文献的快速产生给临床医生和科学家带来了巨大的负担。因此,本文旨在从牙科研究的角度,确定和描述 COVID-19 的科学文献,包括文献来源、研究领域、研究类型和证据水平(LoE)。
数据从 Web of Science、Scopus 和 PubMed 中检索。对文献数据、合作网络和关键词共现分析进行描述性分析。根据研究领域、主要研究问题、研究类型和 LoE 对文章进行进一步分类。
本研究共确定了 296 篇牙科 COVID-19 原始研究论文,发表在 89 种期刊上,由来自 53 个国家的 429 个机构的 1331 名作者合著。虽然 81.4%的论文是单一国家的,但也观察到了单一国家机构之间的广泛合作(意大利、英国和巴西的机构)。主要研究领域如下:唾液和其他口腔液体作为 COVID-19 检测有前途样本的潜在用途、牙科教育和牙科实践中 COVID-19 传播预防指南。大多数文章是叙述性评论、横断面研究和短篇通讯。分析的牙科文献整体 LoE 较低,只有两篇具有最高 LoE I 的系统评价。
关于 COVID-19 大流行的牙科文献没有提供与循证决策过程相关的数据。未来需要进行具有较高 LoE 的研究,以获得牙科各领域 COVID-19 感染的准确知识。
已发表的关于 COVID-19 的牙科文献主要由低水平科学证据的文章组成,这些文章没有提供足够的可靠高质量证据,而这些证据对于临床牙科实践中的决策至关重要。