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非洲癌症基因组学出版物的作者模式。

Authorship Patterns in Cancer Genomics Publications Across Africa.

机构信息

Department of Translational Genomics, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA.

Department of Biochemistry, Covenant University, Ota, Nigeria.

出版信息

JCO Glob Oncol. 2021 May;7:747-755. doi: 10.1200/GO.20.00552.

Abstract

PURPOSE

Authorship is a proxy indicator of research capacity. Understanding the research capacity is imperative for developing population-specific cancer control strategies. This is particularly apropos for African nations, where mortality from cancer is projected to surpass that from infectious disease and the populations are critically under-represented in cancer and genomics studies. Here, we present an analysis and discussion of the patterns of authorship in Africa as they pertain to cancer genomics research across African countries.

METHODS

PubMed metadata of relevant cancer genomics peer-reviewed publications on African populations, published between January 1, 1990, and December 31, 2019, were retrieved and analyzed for patterns of authorship affiliation using R packages, RISmed, and Pubmed.mineR.

RESULTS

The data showed that only 0.016% (n = 375) of cancer publications globally were on cancer genomics of African people. More than 50% of the first and last authors of these publications originated from the North African countries of Tunisia, Morocco, Egypt, and Algeria. South Africa (13.6% and 12.7%) and Nigeria (2.2% and 1.9%) were the Sub-Saharan African countries most represented by first and last authorship positions, respectively. The United States contributed 12.6% of first and last authored papers, and nearly 50% of all African countries had no contributing author for the publications we reviewed.

CONCLUSION

This study highlights and brings awareness to the paucity of cancer genomics research on African populations and by African authors and identifies a need for concerted efforts to encourage and enable more research in Africa, needed for achieving global equity in cancer outcomes.

摘要

目的

作者身份是研究能力的代理指标。了解研究能力对于制定针对特定人群的癌症控制策略至关重要。这对于非洲国家尤其重要,因为预计这些国家的癌症死亡率将超过传染病死亡率,而且这些国家的癌症和基因组学研究中人口代表性严重不足。在这里,我们分析和讨论了非洲国家癌症基因组学研究中作者身份的模式。

方法

检索并分析了 1990 年 1 月 1 日至 2019 年 12 月 31 日期间在非洲人群中发表的癌症基因组学同行评审出版物的 PubMed 元数据,使用 R 包、RISmed 和 Pubmed.mineR 分析作者隶属关系模式。

结果

数据显示,全球只有 0.016%(n=375)的癌症出版物是关于非洲人群的癌症基因组学。这些出版物的第一作者和最后作者中,有超过 50%来自北非国家突尼斯、摩洛哥、埃及和阿尔及利亚。南非(13.6%和 12.7%)和尼日利亚(2.2%和 1.9%)是按第一作者和最后作者身份代表人数最多的撒哈拉以南非洲国家。美国贡献了 12.6%的第一作者和最后作者论文,在我们审查的出版物中,近 50%的非洲国家没有作者。

结论

本研究强调并意识到针对非洲人群和非洲作者的癌症基因组学研究的匮乏,并指出需要共同努力,鼓励和促进非洲更多的研究,以实现全球癌症结果的公平。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/9513/8457814/33f31bd707b5/go-7-go.20.00552-g001.jpg

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