Nutrition Department and Graduate Program of Nutrition Science, Federal University of Health Science of Porto Alegre, Brazil.
Research Centre for Healthcare & Communities, Coventry University, Coventry, UK; Centre for Agroecology, Water and Resilience (CAWR), Coventry University, UK.
Clin Nutr. 2024 Jul;43(7):1626-1635. doi: 10.1016/j.clnu.2024.04.038. Epub 2024 May 3.
There is a need to consolidate reporting guidance for nutrition randomised controlled trial (RCT) protocols. The reporting completeness in nutrition RCT protocols and study characteristics associated with adherence to SPIRIT and TIDieR reporting guidelines are unknown. We, therefore, assessed reporting completeness and its potential predictors in a random sample of published nutrition and diet-related RCT protocols.
We conducted a meta-research study of 200 nutrition and diet-related RCT protocols published in 2019 and 2021 (aiming to consider periods before and after the start of the COVID pandemic). Data extraction included bibliometric information, general study characteristics, compliance with 122 questions corresponding to items and subitems in the SPIRIT and TIDieR checklists combined, and mention to these reporting guidelines in the publications. We calculated the proportion of protocols reporting each item and the frequency of items reported for each protocol. We investigated associations between selected publication aspects and reporting completeness using linear regression analysis.
The majority of protocols included adults and elderly as their study population (n = 73; 36.5%), supplementation as intervention (n = 96; 48.0%), placebo as comparator (n = 89; 44.5%), and evaluated clinical status as the outcome (n = 80; 40.0%). Most protocols described a parallel RCT (n = 188; 94.0%) with a superiority framework (n = 141; 70.5%). Overall reporting completeness was 52.0% (SD = 10.8%). Adherence to SPIRIT items ranged from 0% (n = 0) (data collection methods) to 98.5% (n = 197) (eligibility criteria). Adherence to TIDieR items ranged from 5.5% (n = 11) (materials used in the intervention) to 98.5% (n = 197) (description of the intervention). The multivariable regression analysis suggests that a higher number of authors [β = 0.53 (95%CI: 0.28-0.78)], most recent published protocols [β = 3.19 (95%CI: 0.24-6.14)], request of reporting guideline checklist during the submission process by the journal [β = 6.50 (95%CI: 2.56-10.43)] and mention of SPIRIT by the authors [β = 5.15 (95%CI: 2.44-7.86)] are related to higher reporting completeness scores.
Reporting completeness in a random sample of 200 diet or nutrition-related RCT protocols was low. Number of authors, year of publication, self-reported adherence to SPIRIT, and journals' endorsement of reporting guidelines seem to be positively associated with reporting completeness in nutrition and diet-related RCT protocols.
需要整合营养随机对照试验(RCT)方案的报告指南。目前尚不清楚营养 RCT 方案的报告完整性以及与遵守 SPIRIT 和 TIDieR 报告指南相关的研究特征。因此,我们评估了随机抽取的已发表的营养和饮食相关 RCT 方案中的报告完整性及其潜在预测因素。
我们对 2019 年和 2021 年发表的 200 篇营养和饮食相关 RCT 方案进行了元研究,旨在考虑 COVID 大流行前后的时期。数据提取包括文献计量信息、一般研究特征、对 SPIRIT 和 TIDieR 清单中 122 个问题对应的项目和子项目的依从性,以及出版物中对这些报告指南的提及。我们计算了报告每个项目的方案比例和每个方案报告的项目频率。我们使用线性回归分析调查了选定的出版方面与报告完整性之间的关联。
大多数方案纳入了成年人和老年人作为研究人群(n=73;36.5%)、补充剂作为干预措施(n=96;48.0%)、安慰剂作为对照(n=89;44.5%),并评估了临床状态作为结局(n=80;40.0%)。大多数方案描述了平行 RCT(n=188;94.0%),具有优势框架(n=141;70.5%)。总体报告完整性为 52.0%(SD=10.8%)。SPIRIT 项目的依从性从 0%(n=0)(数据收集方法)到 98.5%(n=197)(纳入标准)不等。TIDieR 项目的依从性从 5.5%(n=11)(干预中使用的材料)到 98.5%(n=197)(干预描述)不等。多变量回归分析表明,作者数量较多[β=0.53(95%CI:0.28-0.78)]、最近发表的方案[β=3.19(95%CI:0.24-6.14)]、期刊在提交过程中要求报告指南检查表[β=6.50(95%CI:2.56-10.43)]和作者对 SPIRIT 的提及[β=5.15(95%CI:2.44-7.86)]与更高的报告完整性评分相关。
在随机抽取的 200 篇饮食或营养相关 RCT 方案中,报告完整性较低。作者人数、发表年份、自我报告的 SPIRIT 依从性以及期刊对报告指南的认可似乎与营养和饮食相关 RCT 方案的报告完整性呈正相关。