Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Department of Surgery, Tufts Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
J Burn Care Res. 2022 May 17;43(3):586-591. doi: 10.1093/jbcr/irab136.
This study aims to systematically review the accuracy of the self-reporting of conflicts of interest (COIs) among studies related to the use of dermal substitute products in burn management and evaluate factors associated with increased discrepancies. To do so, a literature search was done to identify studies investigating the use of dermal substitutes in burn management published between 2015 and 2019. Industry payments were collected using the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Open Payments database. Declared COIs were then compared with the listed payments. Studies and authors were considered to have a COI if they received payments totaling more than $100 for each company. A total of 51 studies (322 authors) were included for analysis. Forty studies and 104 authors received at least one payment from the industry. Of these studies, 38 (95%) studies and 91 (88%) authors were found to have a COI discrepancy. From 2015 to 2019, 1391 general payments (totaling $1,696,848) and 108 research payments (totaling $1,849,537) were made by 82 companies. When increasing the threshold on what would be considered an undisclosed payment, the proportion of authors with discrepancies gradually decreased, from 88% of authors with undisclosed payments more than $100 to 27% of authors with undisclosed payments more than $10,000. Author order, journal impact factor, and study type were not significantly associated with increased risk of discrepancy. We found that the majority of studies investigating the use of dermal substitute products for burn management did not accurately declare COI, highlighting the need for a uniform declaration process and greater transparency of industry sponsorship by authors when publishing peer-reviewed burn surgery research papers.
本研究旨在系统地回顾与使用皮肤替代物治疗烧伤管理相关的研究中自我报告的利益冲突(COI)的准确性,并评估与差异增加相关的因素。为此,进行了文献检索,以确定 2015 年至 2019 年间调查皮肤替代物在烧伤管理中应用的研究。使用医疗保险和医疗补助服务中心(Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services)的公开支付数据库收集行业付款。然后将申报的 COI 与列出的付款进行比较。如果研究和作者从每家公司收到的款项总计超过 100 美元,则认为他们有 COI。共有 51 项研究(322 名作者)被纳入分析。40 项研究和 104 名作者从该行业获得了至少一笔付款。在这些研究中,发现 38 项(95%)研究和 91 项(88%)作者存在 COI 差异。2015 年至 2019 年,82 家公司共支付了 1391 笔一般款项(总计 1696848 美元)和 108 笔研究款项(总计 1849537 美元)。当提高被认为是未披露支付的阈值时,作者有差异的比例逐渐降低,从有未披露支付超过 100 美元的作者的 88%降至有未披露支付超过 10000 美元的作者的 27%。作者顺序、期刊影响因子和研究类型与差异风险增加无关。我们发现,大多数调查皮肤替代物在烧伤管理中应用的研究没有准确申报 COI,这突显了在发表同行评议烧伤外科研究论文时,作者需要统一的申报程序和更透明的行业赞助。