Lauper Kim, Buitrago-Garcia Diana, Courvoisier Delphine S, Iudici Michele, Mongin Denis
Division of rheumatology, Geneva University Hospitals, Geneva, Switzerland.
Faculty of medicine, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland.
RMD Open. 2025 Mar 27;11(1):e005341. doi: 10.1136/rmdopen-2024-005341.
We examined the evolution and influencing factors of women's authorship in randomised controlled trials (RCTs) published in rheumatology.
We analysed all RCTs published in rheumatology from 2009 to 2023 determining authors' gender using the Gender API service. The percentage of women as authors in published RCTs and its association with potential factors was assessed using generalised estimating equations. We considered women's gender as the primary outcome and included the continent of the RCT, the status of international collaboration, industrial funding, intervention type, sample size, the journal's adherence to International Committee of Medical Journal Editors recommendations, impact factor, publication year, authors' non-academic affiliations and author positions as exposures of interest.
We included 1092 RCTs with 10 794 authors; in the overall non-adjusted estimated analysis, we found that women accounted for 39.8% (95% CI 38.4% to 41.2%) of all authors. Women authorship was higher in African-based RCTs, among pharmaceutical-affiliated authors, and when the last author was a woman (OR 2.34 (95% CI 1.02 to 5.38), +19.46 pp). It was lower in Asian and European RCTs and industry-funded RCTs (OR 0.79 (95% CI 0.66 to 0.93), -5.85 pp). Women were less often last (OR 0.63 (95% CI 0.54 to 0.74), -10.2 pp) or second-to-last authors (OR 0.73 (95% CI 0.62 to 0.85), -10.19 pp), with no differences by international status or publication year.
The persistent under-representation of women in RCTs and their lower chances of being senior authors highlight the need for better strategies to close the gender gap. RCTs with a woman last author were more likely to have a woman first author, suggesting a potential role model effect.
我们研究了发表在风湿病学领域的随机对照试验(RCT)中女性作者情况的演变及其影响因素。
我们分析了2009年至2023年发表在风湿病学领域的所有随机对照试验,使用性别应用程序编程接口(Gender API)服务确定作者性别。采用广义估计方程评估已发表随机对照试验中女性作者的比例及其与潜在因素的关联。我们将女性性别作为主要结果,并将随机对照试验的所在洲、国际合作状况、产业资助、干预类型、样本量、期刊对医学期刊编辑国际委员会建议的遵循情况、影响因子、发表年份、作者的非学术附属关系以及作者职位作为感兴趣的暴露因素。
我们纳入了1092项随机对照试验,涉及10794名作者;在总体未调整的估计分析中,我们发现女性占所有作者的39.8%(95%置信区间38.4%至41.2%)。在以非洲为基地的随机对照试验中、制药附属作者中以及最后一位作者为女性时,女性作者比例更高(比值比2.34(95%置信区间1.02至5.38),增加19.46个百分点)。在亚洲和欧洲的随机对照试验以及产业资助的随机对照试验中该比例较低(比值比0.79(95%置信区间0.66至0.93),减少5.85个百分点)。女性较少担任最后一位作者(比值比0.63(95%置信区间0.54至0.74),减少10.2个百分点)或倒数第二位作者(比值比0.73(95%置信区间0.62至0.85),减少10.19个百分点),在国际地位或发表年份方面无差异。
随机对照试验中女性持续代表性不足以及她们担任高级作者的机会较低,凸显了需要采取更好的策略来缩小性别差距。最后一位作者为女性的随机对照试验更有可能首位作者也是女性,这表明存在潜在的榜样效应。