心血管文献研究实践的透明度。

IF 6.4 1区 生物学 Q1 BIOLOGY
eLife Pub Date : 2025-03-26 DOI:10.7554/eLife.81051
Gabriel O Heckerman, Eileen Tzng, Arely Campos-Melendez, Chisomaga Ekwueme, Adrienne Mueller
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:一些领域描述了科学研究的低可重复性和研究报告实践中的低可及性。虽然以前的报告已经调查了可获得的报告实践,从而在其他领域进行可重复的研究,但迄今为止,还没有研究探索心血管科学文献中可获得和可重复的研究实践的程度。方法:为了研究心血管研究报告的可及性和可重复性,我们随机选择了2019年发表在三种顶级心血管科学出版物上的639篇文章:Circulation、欧洲心脏杂志和美国心脏病学会杂志(JACC)。在这639篇文章中,393篇是实证研究文章。我们使用一套可访问标准筛选每篇论文,包括协议、材料、数据和分析脚本的可用性,以及出版物本身的可访问性,以获得可访问和可复制的研究实践。我们还量化了心血管研究类型和期刊格式内部和之间开放研究实践的一致性。结果:我们发现只有不到2%的心血管研究出版物提供了足够的资源(材料、方法、数据和分析脚本)来完全复制他们的研究。在筛选的639篇文章中,393篇是实证研究,可以使用我们的方案评估其可重复性,而不是评论或综述。在计算了可访问性得分作为一篇文章提供其资源的程度的衡量标准后,我们还表明,可访问性水平在不同的研究类型之间存在差异,案例研究或病例系列的得分为0.08,临床试验的得分为0.39 (p = 5.500E-5),在不同的期刊之间(0.19至0.34,p = 1.230E-2)。我们进一步表明,在哪些研究类型共享哪些资源方面存在显著差异。结论:尽管不同期刊和研究类型的出版物中可重复报告实践的程度差异很大,但目前的心血管科学报告经常没有提供足够的材料、方案、数据或分析信息来重现研究。在未来,期刊或资助机构规定的更高的可访问性标准将有助于提高心血管研究的可重复性。资助:作者Gabriel Heckerman, Arely camposs - melendez和Chisomaga Ekwueme得到了国家心肺血液研究所(R25HL147666)的NIH R25资助。曾爱玲获得美国心脏协会机构培训奖奖学金(18UFEL33960207)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Transparency of research practices in cardiovascular literature.

Background: Several fields have described low reproducibility of scientific research and poor accessibility in research reporting practices. Although previous reports have investigated accessible reporting practices that lead to reproducible research in other fields, to date, no study has explored the extent of accessible and reproducible research practices in cardiovascular science literature.

Methods: To study accessibility and reproducibility in cardiovascular research reporting, we screened 639 randomly selected articles published in 2019 in three top cardiovascular science publications: Circulation, the European Heart Journal, and the Journal of the American College of Cardiology (JACC). Of those 639 articles, 393 were empirical research articles. We screened each paper for accessible and reproducible research practices using a set of accessibility criteria including protocol, materials, data, and analysis script availability, as well as accessibility of the publication itself. We also quantified the consistency of open research practices within and across cardiovascular study types and journal formats.

Results: We identified that fewer than 2% of cardiovascular research publications provide sufficient resources (materials, methods, data, and analysis scripts) to fully reproduce their studies. Of the 639 articles screened, 393 were empirical research studies for which reproducibility could be assessed using our protocol, as opposed to commentaries or reviews. After calculating an accessibility score as a measure of the extent to which an article makes its resources available, we also showed that the level of accessibility varies across study types with a score of 0.08 for Case Studies or Case Series and 0.39 for Clinical Trials (p = 5.500E-5) and across journals (0.19 through 0.34, p = 1.230E-2). We further showed that there are significant differences in which study types share which resources.

Conclusion: Although the degree to which reproducible reporting practices are present in publications varies significantly across journals and study types, current cardiovascular science reports frequently do not provide sufficient materials, protocols, data, or analysis information to reproduce a study. In the future, having higher standards of accessibility mandated by either journals or funding bodies will help increase the reproducibility of cardiovascular research.

Funding: Authors Gabriel Heckerman, Arely Campos-Melendez, and Chisomaga Ekwueme were supported by an NIH R25 grant from the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute (R25HL147666). Eileen Tzng was supported by an AHA Institutional Training Award fellowship (18UFEL33960207).

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来源期刊
eLife
eLife BIOLOGY-
CiteScore
12.90
自引率
3.90%
发文量
3122
审稿时长
17 weeks
期刊介绍: eLife is a distinguished, not-for-profit, peer-reviewed open access scientific journal that specializes in the fields of biomedical and life sciences. eLife is known for its selective publication process, which includes a variety of article types such as: Research Articles: Detailed reports of original research findings. Short Reports: Concise presentations of significant findings that do not warrant a full-length research article. Tools and Resources: Descriptions of new tools, technologies, or resources that facilitate scientific research. Research Advances: Brief reports on significant scientific advancements that have immediate implications for the field. Scientific Correspondence: Short communications that comment on or provide additional information related to published articles. Review Articles: Comprehensive overviews of a specific topic or field within the life sciences.
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