Title
Randomized trials published in higher vs. lower impact journals differ in design, conduct, and analysis
Date Issued
01 March 2013
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Bala M.M.
Akl E.A.
Sun X.
Bassler D.
Mertz D.
Mejza F.
Vandvik P.O.
Johnston B.C.
Dahm P.
Alonso-Coello P.
Diaz-Granados N.
Srinathan S.K.
Hassouneh B.
Briel M.
Busse J.W.
You J.J.
Walter S.D.
Altman D.G.
Guyatt G.H.
Abstract
Objective: To compare methodological characteristics of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) published in higher vs. lower impact Core Clinical Journals. Study Design and Setting: We searched MEDLINE for RCTs published in 2007 in Core Clinical Journals. We randomly sampled 1,140 study reports in a 1:1 ratio in higher (five general medicine journals with the highest total citations in 2007) and lower impact journals. Results: Four hundred sixty-nine RCTs proved eligible: 219 in higher and 250 in lower impact journals. RCTs in higher vs. lower impact journals had larger sample sizes (median, 285 vs. 39), were more likely to receive industry funding (53% vs. 28%), declare concealment of allocation (66% vs. 36%), declare blinding of health care providers (53% vs. 41%) and outcome adjudicators (72% vs. 54%), report a patient-important primary outcome (69% vs. 50%), report subgroup analyses (64% vs. 26%), prespecify subgroup hypotheses (42% vs. 20%), and report a test for interaction (54% vs. 27%); P < 0.05 for all differences. Conclusion: RCTs published in higher impact journals were more likely to report methodological safeguards against bias and patient-important outcomes than those published in lower impact journals. However, sufficient limitations remain such that publication in a higher impact journal does not ensure low risk of bias. © 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Start page
286
End page
295
Volume
66
Issue
3
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Ciencias médicas, Ciencias de la salud
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-84872767239
PubMed ID
Source
Journal of Clinical Epidemiology
ISSN of the container
08954356
Sponsor(s)
Funding/support: M.B. is supported by santésuisse and the Gottfried and Julia Bangerter-Rhyner Foundation . J.W.B is funded by a New Investigator Award from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and the Canadian Chiropractic Research Foundation . D.B. is supported by the European Union ( grant award health-F5-2009-223060 ). D.M. is supported by a research scholarship from the Swiss National Science Foundation ( PBBSP3-124436 and PASMP3-132571 ) and Lichtenstein-Stiftung , Basel, Switzerland. P.D. is supported by a Dennis W. Jahnigan Carreer Development Award by the American Geriatrics Society . S.K.S. holds a Rudy Falk Clinician Scientist Award. P.A.-C. is funded by a Miguel Servet research contract from the Instituto de Salud Carlos III ( CP09/00137 ). J.J.Y. is supported by a Hamilton Health Sciences Early Career Award.
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus