University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, Virginia.
Department of Public Health Sciences and Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia.
J Arthroplasty. 2023 May;38(5):945-949. doi: 10.1016/j.arth.2022.12.008. Epub 2022 Dec 13.
The use of administrative databases and clinical registries in lower extremity arthroplasty research is growing. Such observational studies are unable to fully control for confounders and cannot establish causality. However, many authors use causal language when describing their aims or findings, potentially misleading readers. We examined the prevalence of causal language and inferences in the lower extremity arthroplasty literature.
We systematically identified administrative database and registry studies on hip and knee arthroplasty that were published in 4 orthopaedic journals in 2020. Articles were graded independently by two reviewers for the presence of causal language in both the title and abstract and the full text. Chi-squared analyses were conducted to determine the relationship between the causality grading and article characteristics including the journal of publication.
Of 116 eligible articles, we classified 79.3% of titles and abstracts as either consistently causal or inconsistently causal, with only 20.7% as consistently noncausal. A total of 40.5% of full texts were consistently causal, 49.1% were inconsistent, and 10.3% were consistently noncausal. Chi-squared analyses revealed no statistically significant association between the title and abstract's grading and the journal (P = .720) nor with the use of a database or registry (P = .716).
Causal language and inferences were present in 79.3% of titles and abstracts of lower extremity arthroplasty observational database studies published in 2020. The high prevalence of causal language and inferences in the arthroplasty literature may mislead readers.
在下肢关节置换研究中,使用行政数据库和临床登记处的情况越来越多。这种观察性研究无法完全控制混杂因素,也无法确定因果关系。然而,许多作者在描述其目的或发现时使用了因果语言,可能会误导读者。我们检查了下肢关节置换文献中因果语言和推论的流行程度。
我们系统地确定了 2020 年在 4 种矫形外科期刊上发表的髋关节和膝关节置换的行政数据库和登记研究。由两名评审员独立对标题和摘要以及全文中的因果语言存在情况进行分级。进行卡方分析,以确定因果关系分级与包括出版期刊在内的文章特征之间的关系。
在 116 篇合格文章中,我们将 79.3%的标题和摘要分类为因果一致或因果不一致,只有 20.7%为因果不一致。共有 40.5%的全文为因果一致,49.1%为因果不一致,10.3%为因果一致。卡方分析显示,标题和摘要的分级与期刊(P=0.720)或数据库或登记处的使用(P=0.716)之间没有统计学上的显著关联。
在 2020 年发表的下肢关节置换观察性数据库研究的标题和摘要中,79.3%包含因果语言和推论。矫形外科文献中因果语言和推论的高流行率可能会误导读者。