Temerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry, Western University, London, Ontario, Canada.
Influenza Other Respir Viruses. 2024 Jul;18(7):e13283. doi: 10.1111/irv.13283.
Complete reporting of seroepidemiologic studies is critical to their utility in evidence synthesis and public health decision making. The Reporting of Seroepidemiologic studies-SARS-CoV-2 (ROSES-S) guideline is a checklist that aims to improve reporting in SARS-CoV-2 seroepidemiologic studies. Adherence to the ROSES-S guideline has not yet been evaluated.
This study aims to evaluate the completeness of SARS-CoV-2 seroepidemiologic study reporting by the ROSES-S guideline during the COVID-19 pandemic, determine whether guideline publication was associated with reporting completeness, and identify study characteristics associated with reporting completeness.
A random sample from the SeroTracker living systematic review database was evaluated. For each reporting item in the guideline, the percentage of studies that were adherent was calculated, as well as median and interquartile range (IQR) adherence across all items and by item domain. Beta regression analyses were used to evaluate predictors of adherence to ROSES-S.
One hundred and ninety-nine studies were analyzed. Median adherence was 48.1% (IQR 40.0%-55.2%) per study, with overall adherence ranging from 8.8% to 72.7%. The laboratory methods domain had the lowest median adherence (33.3% [IQR 25.0%-41.7%]). The discussion domain had the highest median adherence (75.0% [IQR 50.0%-100.0%]). Reporting adherence to ROSES-S before and after guideline publication did not significantly change. Publication source (p < 0.001), study risk of bias (p = 0.001), and sampling method (p = 0.004) were significantly associated with adherence.
Completeness of reporting in SARS-CoV-2 seroepidemiologic studies was suboptimal. Publication of the ROSES-S guideline was not associated with changes in reporting practices. Authors should improve adherence to the ROSES-S guideline with support from stakeholders.
全面报告血清流行病学研究对于将其应用于证据综合和公共卫生决策至关重要。《血清流行病学研究报告-SARS-CoV-2(ROSES-S)指南》是一份清单,旨在提高 SARS-CoV-2 血清流行病学研究的报告质量。然而,该指南的实施情况尚未得到评估。
本研究旨在评估 COVID-19 大流行期间,SARS-CoV-2 血清流行病学研究报告是否符合 ROSES-S 指南的要求,确定指南的发布是否与报告的完整性相关,并确定与报告完整性相关的研究特征。
对 SeroTracker 实时系统评价数据库中的随机样本进行评估。对于指南中的每个报告项目,计算符合率(符合的研究比例),以及所有项目和项目域的中位数和四分位距(IQR)。采用贝塔回归分析评估 ROSES-S 符合率的预测因素。
共分析了 199 项研究。每项研究的中位数符合率为 48.1%(IQR 40.0%-55.2%),总符合率范围为 8.8%-72.7%。实验室方法域的中位数符合率最低(33.3%[IQR 25.0%-41.7%])。讨论域的中位数符合率最高(75.0%[IQR 50.0%-100.0%])。指南发布前后,报告对 ROSES-S 的符合率没有显著变化。出版来源(p<0.001)、研究偏倚风险(p=0.001)和抽样方法(p=0.004)与符合率显著相关。
SARS-CoV-2 血清流行病学研究的报告完整性欠佳。ROSES-S 指南的发布与报告实践的变化无关。作者应在利益相关者的支持下,提高对 ROSES-S 指南的遵守程度。