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Reporting preclinical anesthesia study (REPEAT): Evaluating the quality of reporting in the preclinical anesthesiology literature

Poor reporting quality may contribute to irreproducibility of results and failed ‘bench-to-bedside’ translation. Consequently, guidelines have been developed to improve the complete and transparent reporting of in vivo preclinical studies. To examine the impact of such guidelines on core methodologi...

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Autores principales: Fergusson, Dean A., Avey, Marc T., Barron, Carly C., Bocock, Mathew, Biefer, Kristen E., Boet, Sylvain, Bourque, Stephane L., Conic, Isidora, Chen, Kai, Dong, Yuan Yi., Fox, Grace M., George, Ronald B., Goldenberg, Neil M., Gragasin, Ferrante S., Harsha, Prathiba, Hong, Patrick J., James, Tyler E., Larrigan, Sarah M., MacNeil, Jenna L., Manuel, Courtney A., Maximos, Sarah, Mazer, David, Mittal, Rohan, McGinn, Ryan, Nguyen, Long H., Patel, Abhilasha, Richebé, Philippe, Saha, Tarit K., Steinberg, Benjamin E., Sampson, Sonja D., Stewart, Duncan J., Syed, Summer, Vella, Kimberly, Wesch, Neil L., Lalu, Manoj M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6532843/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31120888
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215221
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author Fergusson, Dean A.
Avey, Marc T.
Barron, Carly C.
Bocock, Mathew
Biefer, Kristen E.
Boet, Sylvain
Bourque, Stephane L.
Conic, Isidora
Chen, Kai
Dong, Yuan Yi.
Fox, Grace M.
George, Ronald B.
Goldenberg, Neil M.
Gragasin, Ferrante S.
Harsha, Prathiba
Hong, Patrick J.
James, Tyler E.
Larrigan, Sarah M.
MacNeil, Jenna L.
Manuel, Courtney A.
Maximos, Sarah
Mazer, David
Mittal, Rohan
McGinn, Ryan
Nguyen, Long H.
Patel, Abhilasha
Richebé, Philippe
Saha, Tarit K.
Steinberg, Benjamin E.
Sampson, Sonja D.
Stewart, Duncan J.
Syed, Summer
Vella, Kimberly
Wesch, Neil L.
Lalu, Manoj M.
author_facet Fergusson, Dean A.
Avey, Marc T.
Barron, Carly C.
Bocock, Mathew
Biefer, Kristen E.
Boet, Sylvain
Bourque, Stephane L.
Conic, Isidora
Chen, Kai
Dong, Yuan Yi.
Fox, Grace M.
George, Ronald B.
Goldenberg, Neil M.
Gragasin, Ferrante S.
Harsha, Prathiba
Hong, Patrick J.
James, Tyler E.
Larrigan, Sarah M.
MacNeil, Jenna L.
Manuel, Courtney A.
Maximos, Sarah
Mazer, David
Mittal, Rohan
McGinn, Ryan
Nguyen, Long H.
Patel, Abhilasha
Richebé, Philippe
Saha, Tarit K.
Steinberg, Benjamin E.
Sampson, Sonja D.
Stewart, Duncan J.
Syed, Summer
Vella, Kimberly
Wesch, Neil L.
Lalu, Manoj M.
author_sort Fergusson, Dean A.
collection PubMed
description Poor reporting quality may contribute to irreproducibility of results and failed ‘bench-to-bedside’ translation. Consequently, guidelines have been developed to improve the complete and transparent reporting of in vivo preclinical studies. To examine the impact of such guidelines on core methodological and analytical reporting items in the preclinical anesthesiology literature, we sampled a cohort of studies. Preclinical in vivo studies published in Anesthesiology, Anesthesia & Analgesia, Anaesthesia, and the British Journal of Anaesthesia (2008–2009, 2014–2016) were identified. Data was extracted independently and in duplicate. Reporting completeness was assessed using the National Institutes of Health Principles and Guidelines for Reporting Preclinical Research. Risk ratios were used for comparative analyses. Of 7615 screened articles, 604 met our inclusion criteria and included experiments reporting on 52 490 animals. The most common topic of investigation was pain and analgesia (30%), rodents were most frequently used (77%), and studies were most commonly conducted in the United States (36%). Use of preclinical reporting guidelines was listed in 10% of applicable articles. A minority of studies fully reported on replicates (0.3%), randomization (10%), blinding (12%), sample-size estimation (3%), and inclusion/exclusion criteria (5%). Statistics were well reported (81%). Comparative analysis demonstrated few differences in reporting rigor between journals, including those that endorsed reporting guidelines. Principal items of study design were infrequently reported, with few differences between journals. Methods to improve implementation and adherence to community-based reporting guidelines may be necessary to increase transparent and consistent reporting in the preclinical anesthesiology literature.
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spelling pubmed-65328432019-06-05 Reporting preclinical anesthesia study (REPEAT): Evaluating the quality of reporting in the preclinical anesthesiology literature Fergusson, Dean A. Avey, Marc T. Barron, Carly C. Bocock, Mathew Biefer, Kristen E. Boet, Sylvain Bourque, Stephane L. Conic, Isidora Chen, Kai Dong, Yuan Yi. Fox, Grace M. George, Ronald B. Goldenberg, Neil M. Gragasin, Ferrante S. Harsha, Prathiba Hong, Patrick J. James, Tyler E. Larrigan, Sarah M. MacNeil, Jenna L. Manuel, Courtney A. Maximos, Sarah Mazer, David Mittal, Rohan McGinn, Ryan Nguyen, Long H. Patel, Abhilasha Richebé, Philippe Saha, Tarit K. Steinberg, Benjamin E. Sampson, Sonja D. Stewart, Duncan J. Syed, Summer Vella, Kimberly Wesch, Neil L. Lalu, Manoj M. PLoS One Research Article Poor reporting quality may contribute to irreproducibility of results and failed ‘bench-to-bedside’ translation. Consequently, guidelines have been developed to improve the complete and transparent reporting of in vivo preclinical studies. To examine the impact of such guidelines on core methodological and analytical reporting items in the preclinical anesthesiology literature, we sampled a cohort of studies. Preclinical in vivo studies published in Anesthesiology, Anesthesia & Analgesia, Anaesthesia, and the British Journal of Anaesthesia (2008–2009, 2014–2016) were identified. Data was extracted independently and in duplicate. Reporting completeness was assessed using the National Institutes of Health Principles and Guidelines for Reporting Preclinical Research. Risk ratios were used for comparative analyses. Of 7615 screened articles, 604 met our inclusion criteria and included experiments reporting on 52 490 animals. The most common topic of investigation was pain and analgesia (30%), rodents were most frequently used (77%), and studies were most commonly conducted in the United States (36%). Use of preclinical reporting guidelines was listed in 10% of applicable articles. A minority of studies fully reported on replicates (0.3%), randomization (10%), blinding (12%), sample-size estimation (3%), and inclusion/exclusion criteria (5%). Statistics were well reported (81%). Comparative analysis demonstrated few differences in reporting rigor between journals, including those that endorsed reporting guidelines. Principal items of study design were infrequently reported, with few differences between journals. Methods to improve implementation and adherence to community-based reporting guidelines may be necessary to increase transparent and consistent reporting in the preclinical anesthesiology literature. Public Library of Science 2019-05-23 /pmc/articles/PMC6532843/ /pubmed/31120888 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215221 Text en © 2019 Fergusson et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Fergusson, Dean A.
Avey, Marc T.
Barron, Carly C.
Bocock, Mathew
Biefer, Kristen E.
Boet, Sylvain
Bourque, Stephane L.
Conic, Isidora
Chen, Kai
Dong, Yuan Yi.
Fox, Grace M.
George, Ronald B.
Goldenberg, Neil M.
Gragasin, Ferrante S.
Harsha, Prathiba
Hong, Patrick J.
James, Tyler E.
Larrigan, Sarah M.
MacNeil, Jenna L.
Manuel, Courtney A.
Maximos, Sarah
Mazer, David
Mittal, Rohan
McGinn, Ryan
Nguyen, Long H.
Patel, Abhilasha
Richebé, Philippe
Saha, Tarit K.
Steinberg, Benjamin E.
Sampson, Sonja D.
Stewart, Duncan J.
Syed, Summer
Vella, Kimberly
Wesch, Neil L.
Lalu, Manoj M.
Reporting preclinical anesthesia study (REPEAT): Evaluating the quality of reporting in the preclinical anesthesiology literature
title Reporting preclinical anesthesia study (REPEAT): Evaluating the quality of reporting in the preclinical anesthesiology literature
title_full Reporting preclinical anesthesia study (REPEAT): Evaluating the quality of reporting in the preclinical anesthesiology literature
title_fullStr Reporting preclinical anesthesia study (REPEAT): Evaluating the quality of reporting in the preclinical anesthesiology literature
title_full_unstemmed Reporting preclinical anesthesia study (REPEAT): Evaluating the quality of reporting in the preclinical anesthesiology literature
title_short Reporting preclinical anesthesia study (REPEAT): Evaluating the quality of reporting in the preclinical anesthesiology literature
title_sort reporting preclinical anesthesia study (repeat): evaluating the quality of reporting in the preclinical anesthesiology literature
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6532843/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31120888
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215221
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