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Journal Initiatives to Enhance Preclinical Research: Analyses of Stroke, Nature Medicine, Science Translational Medicine

Preclinical research using animals often informs clinical trials. However, its value is dependent on its scientific validity and reproducibility, which are, in turn, dependent on rigorous study design and reporting. In 2011, Stroke introduced a Basic Science Checklist to enhance the reporting and me...

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Autores principales: Ramirez, F. Daniel, Jung, Richard G., Motazedian, Pouya, Perry-Nguyen, Dylan, Di Santo, Pietro, MacDonald, Zachary, Clancy, Aisling A., Labinaz, Alisha, Promislow, Steven, Simard, Trevor, Provencher, Steeve, Bonnet, Sébastien, Graham, Ian D., Wells, George A., Hibbert, Benjamin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6924942/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31718504
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/STROKEAHA.119.026564
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author Ramirez, F. Daniel
Jung, Richard G.
Motazedian, Pouya
Perry-Nguyen, Dylan
Di Santo, Pietro
MacDonald, Zachary
Clancy, Aisling A.
Labinaz, Alisha
Promislow, Steven
Simard, Trevor
Provencher, Steeve
Bonnet, Sébastien
Graham, Ian D.
Wells, George A.
Hibbert, Benjamin
author_facet Ramirez, F. Daniel
Jung, Richard G.
Motazedian, Pouya
Perry-Nguyen, Dylan
Di Santo, Pietro
MacDonald, Zachary
Clancy, Aisling A.
Labinaz, Alisha
Promislow, Steven
Simard, Trevor
Provencher, Steeve
Bonnet, Sébastien
Graham, Ian D.
Wells, George A.
Hibbert, Benjamin
author_sort Ramirez, F. Daniel
collection PubMed
description Preclinical research using animals often informs clinical trials. However, its value is dependent on its scientific validity and reproducibility, which are, in turn, dependent on rigorous study design and reporting. In 2011, Stroke introduced a Basic Science Checklist to enhance the reporting and methodology of its preclinical studies. Except for Nature and Science journals, few others have implemented similar initiatives. We sought to estimate the impact of these journal interventions on the quality of their published reports. METHODS—: All articles published in Stroke, Nature Medicine, and Science Translational Medicine over 9 to 18 years and in 2 control journals without analogous interventions over a corresponding 11.5 years were reviewed to identify reports of experiments in nonhuman mammals with proposed clinical relevance. The effect of journal interventions on the reporting and use of key study design elements was estimated via interrupted time-series analyses. RESULTS—: Of 33 009 articles screened, 4162 studies met inclusion criteria. In the 3.5 to 12 years preceding each journal’s intervention, the proportions of studies reporting and using key study design elements were stable except for blinding in Stroke and randomization in Science Translational Medicine, which were both increasing. Post-intervention, abrupt and often marked increases were seen in the reporting of randomization status (level change: +17% to +44%, P≤0.005), blinding (level change: +20% to +40%, P≤0.008), and sample size estimation (level change: 0% to +40%, P≤0.002 in 2 journals). Significant but more modest improvements in the use of these study design elements were also observed. These improvements were not seen in control journals. CONCLUSIONS—: Journal interventions such as Stroke’s author submission checklist can meaningfully improve the quality of published preclinical research and should be considered to enhance study transparency and design. However, such interventions are alone insufficient to fully address widespread shortcomings in preclinical research practices.
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spelling pubmed-69249422020-01-23 Journal Initiatives to Enhance Preclinical Research: Analyses of Stroke, Nature Medicine, Science Translational Medicine Ramirez, F. Daniel Jung, Richard G. Motazedian, Pouya Perry-Nguyen, Dylan Di Santo, Pietro MacDonald, Zachary Clancy, Aisling A. Labinaz, Alisha Promislow, Steven Simard, Trevor Provencher, Steeve Bonnet, Sébastien Graham, Ian D. Wells, George A. Hibbert, Benjamin Stroke Original Contributions Preclinical research using animals often informs clinical trials. However, its value is dependent on its scientific validity and reproducibility, which are, in turn, dependent on rigorous study design and reporting. In 2011, Stroke introduced a Basic Science Checklist to enhance the reporting and methodology of its preclinical studies. Except for Nature and Science journals, few others have implemented similar initiatives. We sought to estimate the impact of these journal interventions on the quality of their published reports. METHODS—: All articles published in Stroke, Nature Medicine, and Science Translational Medicine over 9 to 18 years and in 2 control journals without analogous interventions over a corresponding 11.5 years were reviewed to identify reports of experiments in nonhuman mammals with proposed clinical relevance. The effect of journal interventions on the reporting and use of key study design elements was estimated via interrupted time-series analyses. RESULTS—: Of 33 009 articles screened, 4162 studies met inclusion criteria. In the 3.5 to 12 years preceding each journal’s intervention, the proportions of studies reporting and using key study design elements were stable except for blinding in Stroke and randomization in Science Translational Medicine, which were both increasing. Post-intervention, abrupt and often marked increases were seen in the reporting of randomization status (level change: +17% to +44%, P≤0.005), blinding (level change: +20% to +40%, P≤0.008), and sample size estimation (level change: 0% to +40%, P≤0.002 in 2 journals). Significant but more modest improvements in the use of these study design elements were also observed. These improvements were not seen in control journals. CONCLUSIONS—: Journal interventions such as Stroke’s author submission checklist can meaningfully improve the quality of published preclinical research and should be considered to enhance study transparency and design. However, such interventions are alone insufficient to fully address widespread shortcomings in preclinical research practices. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins 2020-01 2019-11-13 /pmc/articles/PMC6924942/ /pubmed/31718504 http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/STROKEAHA.119.026564 Text en © 2019 The Authors. Stroke is published on behalf of the American Heart Association, Inc., by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial-NoDerivs (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided that the original work is properly cited, the use is noncommercial, and no modifications or adaptations are made.
spellingShingle Original Contributions
Ramirez, F. Daniel
Jung, Richard G.
Motazedian, Pouya
Perry-Nguyen, Dylan
Di Santo, Pietro
MacDonald, Zachary
Clancy, Aisling A.
Labinaz, Alisha
Promislow, Steven
Simard, Trevor
Provencher, Steeve
Bonnet, Sébastien
Graham, Ian D.
Wells, George A.
Hibbert, Benjamin
Journal Initiatives to Enhance Preclinical Research: Analyses of Stroke, Nature Medicine, Science Translational Medicine
title Journal Initiatives to Enhance Preclinical Research: Analyses of Stroke, Nature Medicine, Science Translational Medicine
title_full Journal Initiatives to Enhance Preclinical Research: Analyses of Stroke, Nature Medicine, Science Translational Medicine
title_fullStr Journal Initiatives to Enhance Preclinical Research: Analyses of Stroke, Nature Medicine, Science Translational Medicine
title_full_unstemmed Journal Initiatives to Enhance Preclinical Research: Analyses of Stroke, Nature Medicine, Science Translational Medicine
title_short Journal Initiatives to Enhance Preclinical Research: Analyses of Stroke, Nature Medicine, Science Translational Medicine
title_sort journal initiatives to enhance preclinical research: analyses of stroke, nature medicine, science translational medicine
topic Original Contributions
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6924942/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31718504
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/STROKEAHA.119.026564
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