Representation in Brain Imaging Research: A Quebec Demographic Overview.

IF 2.2 4区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Olujide Oyeniran, Tudor Sintu, Udunna Anazodo, Benjamin De Leener, Eva Alonso-Ortiz
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Neuroimaging research must reflect the diversity of the populations it aims to serve. This scoping review examines the demographic characteristics (age, sex, race and ethnicity, and geographic representation) of participants in brain MRI and positron-emission tomography studies conducted in Quebec, Canada, between 1992 and 2023. A total of 1,549 studies, representing 62,555 participants, were identified through searches of Medline, Embase and Google Scholar, following JBI methodology. The vast majority of studies (92.7%) were conducted in Montreal, with limited representation from other urban centers and almost none from rural areas. Reporting of demographic variables was inconsistent: 22.1% of studies failed to report participant age adequately, and 20.3% did not fully report sex. Race and ethnicity were the most poorly documented, with fewer than 4% of studies reporting this information. Among the 2,396 participants with recorded race and ethnicity, 94.2% were categorized as White, highlighting a significant mismatch with Quebec's population diversity. Healthy participant samples were largely concentrated in the 20-35 age range, while clinical populations generally aligned with the expected age of disease onset. These findings reveal major gaps in demographic representation and reporting in Quebec-based neuroimaging research. Improving diversity and transparency is essential to ensure that neuroimaging findings are generalizable, equitable and clinically meaningful. We recommend the adoption of standardized demographic reporting formats, such as the Brain Imaging Data Structure, and broader recruitment efforts to capture underrepresented groups, including rural residents and racial and ethnic minorities.

脑成像研究中的代表性:魁北克人口统计综述。
神经影像学研究必须反映其目标服务人群的多样性。本综述研究了1992年至2023年间在加拿大魁北克省进行的脑MRI和正电子发射断层扫描研究中参与者的人口统计学特征(年龄、性别、种族和民族以及地理代表性)。遵循JBI方法,通过Medline、Embase和谷歌Scholar搜索,共确定了1549项研究,代表62555名参与者。绝大多数研究(92.7%)在蒙特利尔进行,来自其他城市中心的代表性有限,几乎没有来自农村地区的代表性。人口统计学变量的报告不一致:22.1%的研究没有充分报告参与者的年龄,20.3%没有完全报告性别。种族和民族是最缺乏记录的,只有不到4%的研究报告了这一信息。在2396名有种族和民族记录的参与者中,94.2%被归类为白人,突出了与魁北克人口多样性的严重不匹配。健康参与者样本主要集中在20-35岁年龄段,而临床人群通常与疾病发病的预期年龄一致。这些发现揭示了魁北克省神经影像学研究在人口统计代表性和报告方面的主要差距。提高多样性和透明度对于确保神经影像学结果具有普遍性、公平性和临床意义至关重要。我们建议采用标准化的人口统计报告格式,如脑成像数据结构,并更广泛地招募工作,以捕捉代表性不足的群体,包括农村居民和种族和少数民族。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
3.30%
发文量
330
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Canadian Neurological Sciences Federation The Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences is the official publication of the four member societies of the Canadian Neurological Sciences Federation -- Canadian Neurological Society (CNS), Canadian Association of Child Neurology (CACN), Canadian Neurosurgical Society (CNSS), Canadian Society of Clinical Neurophysiologists (CSCN). The Journal is a widely circulated internationally recognized medical journal that publishes peer-reviewed articles. The Journal is published in January, March, May, July, September, and November in an online only format. The first Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences (the Journal) was published in 1974 in Winnipeg. In 1981, the Journal became the official publication of the member societies of the CNSF.
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