上消化道肿瘤临床试验中的发表偏差。

IF 1.6 Q4 ONCOLOGY
Journal of Gastrointestinal Cancer Pub Date : 2024-06-01 Epub Date: 2024-03-28 DOI:10.1007/s12029-024-01047-1
Trenton Lippert, Erin Schmucker, Anchal Shukla, Ruha Reddy, Pooja Neerumalla, Gabriella Blanco, Vic Velanovich
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:循证医学要求对医学文献进行评估,以指导临床推理和治疗建议。排除无统计学意义的临床试验的发表偏倚可能会导致对文献的评估不完整,并对患者造成潜在的不完整指导。我们旨在比较阳性和阴性结果临床试验的发表率及其影响:我们查询了美国国立医学图书馆临床试验数据库,确定了以胰腺癌、肝癌和胃癌为主题并报告了结果的临床试验。阳性 "试验的定义是治疗臂之间存在统计学意义上的显著差异,而 "阴性 "试验则没有。收集的数据包括终止原因、干预措施、资助类型、发表率和期刊特征:共研究了 535 项临床试验,在所有病理类型中,主要结果有显著性的临床试验的发表率(99%)高于主要结果无显著性的临床试验的发表率(77%)(P 结论:这些研究结果表明,三项临床试验的主要结果均有显著性:这些研究结果表明,针对三种最常见的上消化道恶性肿瘤的临床试验存在发表偏倚,即偏向于发表主要研究结果显著的研究。这项研究对循证医学的实践方式产生了影响,因为医学文献似乎未能收集到重要的数据供临床决策参考。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Publication Bias in Upper Gastrointestinal Oncology Clinical Trials.

Purpose: Evidence-based medicine requires evaluation of the medical literature to guide clinical reasoning and treatment recommendations. The presence of publication bias towards exclusion of non-statistically significant clinical trials may be leading to an incomplete evaluation of the literature and cause potentially incomplete guidance for patients. We aimed to compare publication rates and impact of publications of positive and negative outcome clinical trials.

Methods: We queried the US National Library of Medicine Clinical Trials database identifying clinical trials with reported results on the topics of pancreatic, liver, and gastric cancer. A "positive" trial was defined as having a statistically significant difference between the treatment arms, while a "negative" did not. Data collected included termination cause, intervention, funding type, publication rates, and journal characteristics.

Results: In total, 535 clinical trials were examined, across all pathologies clinical trials with significant findings for the primary outcome were published at a higher rate (99%) compared to those with non-significant findings (77%) (p < 0.01). Significantly, more studies with significant findings reached at least 80% of their estimated enrollment goal versus non-significant studies, 72% and 53% respectively (p < 0.01). Three of four metrics for impact of publication showed no difference between significant and non-significant studies once they reached publication.

Conclusion: These findings suggest that clinical trials of three of the most common upper gastrointestinal malignancies have a publication bias towards studies with significant primary outcome findings. This study has implications to the way evidence-based medicine is practiced as the medical literature appears to be failing to capture important data for consideration of clinical decision making.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
121
期刊介绍: The Journal of Gastrointestinal Cancer is a multidisciplinary medium for the publication of novel research pertaining to cancers arising from the gastrointestinal tract.The journal is dedicated to the most rapid publication possible.The journal publishes papers in all relevant fields, emphasizing those studies that are helpful in understanding and treating cancers affecting the esophagus, stomach, liver, gallbladder and biliary tree, pancreas, small bowel, large bowel, rectum, and anus. In addition, the Journal of Gastrointestinal Cancer publishes basic and translational scientific information from studies providing insight into the etiology and progression of cancers affecting these organs. New insights are provided from diverse areas of research such as studies exploring pre-neoplastic states, risk factors, epidemiology, genetics, preclinical therapeutics, surgery, radiation therapy, novel medical therapeutics, clinical trials, and outcome studies.In addition to reports of original clinical and experimental studies, the journal also publishes: case reports, state-of-the-art reviews on topics of immediate interest or importance; invited articles analyzing particular areas of pancreatic research and knowledge; perspectives in which critical evaluation and conflicting opinions about current topics may be expressed; meeting highlights that summarize important points presented at recent meetings; abstracts of symposia and conferences; book reviews; hypotheses; Letters to the Editors; and other items of special interest, including:Complex Cases in GI Oncology:  This is a new initiative to provide a forum to review and discuss the history and management of complex and involved gastrointestinal oncology cases. The format will be similar to a teaching case conference where a case vignette is presented and is followed by a series of questions and discussion points. A brief reference list supporting the points made in discussion would be expected.
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