COVID-19-related medical research: a meta-research and critical appraisal
COVID-19-related medical research: a meta-research and critical appraisal
About this item
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Author / Creator
Raynaud, Marc , Zhang, Huanxi , Louis, Kevin , Goutaudier, Valentin , Wang, Jiali , Dubourg, Quentin , Wei, Yongcheng , Demir, Zeynep , Debiais, Charlotte , Aubert, Olivier , Bouatou, Yassine , Lefaucheur, Carmen , Jabre, Patricia , Liu, Longshan , Wang, Changxi , Jouven, Xavier , Reese, Peter , Empana, Jean-Philippe and Loupy, Alexandre
Publisher
England: BioMed Central Ltd
Journal title
Language
English
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Publisher
England: BioMed Central Ltd
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Scope and Contents
Contents
Since the start of the COVID-19 outbreak, a large number of COVID-19-related papers have been published. However, concerns about the risk of expedited science have been raised. We aimed at reviewing and categorizing COVID-19-related medical research and to critically appraise peer-reviewed original articles.
The data sources were Pubmed, Cochrane COVID-19 register study, arXiv, medRxiv and bioRxiv, from 01/11/2019 to 01/05/2020. Peer-reviewed and preprints publications related to COVID-19 were included, written in English or Chinese. No limitations were placed on study design. Reviewers screened and categorized studies according to i) publication type, ii) country of publication, and iii) topics covered. Original articles were critically appraised using validated quality assessment tools.
Among the 11,452 publications identified, 10,516 met the inclusion criteria, among which 7468 (71.0%) were peer-reviewed articles. Among these, 4190 publications (56.1%) did not include any data or analytics (comprising expert opinion pieces). Overall, the most represented topics were infectious disease (n = 2326, 22.1%), epidemiology (n = 1802, 17.1%), and global health (n = 1602, 15.2%). The top five publishing countries were China (25.8%), United States (22.3%), United Kingdom (8.8%), Italy (8.1%) and India (3.4%). The dynamic of publication showed that the exponential growth of COVID-19 peer-reviewed articles was mainly driven by publications without original data (mean 261.5 articles ± 51.1 per week) as compared with original articles (mean of 69.3 ± 22.3 articles per week). Original articles including patient data accounted for 713 (9.5%) of peer-reviewed studies. A total of 576 original articles (80.8%) showed intermediate to high risk of bias. Last, except for simulation studies that mainly used large-scale open data, the median number of patients enrolled was of 102 (IQR = 37-337).
Since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, the majority of research is composed by publications without original data. Peer-reviewed original articles with data showed a high risk of bias and included a limited number of patients. Together, these findings underscore the urgent need to strike a balance between the velocity and quality of research, and to cautiously consider medical information and clinical applicability in a pressing, pandemic context. SYSTEMATIC REVIEW REGISTRATION: https://osf.io/5zjyx/....
Alternative Titles
Full title
COVID-19-related medical research: a meta-research and critical appraisal
Authors, Artists and Contributors
Author / Creator
Zhang, Huanxi
Louis, Kevin
Goutaudier, Valentin
Wang, Jiali
Dubourg, Quentin
Wei, Yongcheng
Demir, Zeynep
Debiais, Charlotte
Aubert, Olivier
Bouatou, Yassine
Lefaucheur, Carmen
Jabre, Patricia
Liu, Longshan
Wang, Changxi
Jouven, Xavier
Reese, Peter
Empana, Jean-Philippe
Loupy, Alexandre
Identifiers
Primary Identifiers
Record Identifier
TN_cdi_doaj_primary_oai_doaj_org_article_52dfddf0eb4740608f73daac6f7213eb
Permalink
https://devfeature-collection.sl.nsw.gov.au/record/TN_cdi_doaj_primary_oai_doaj_org_article_52dfddf0eb4740608f73daac6f7213eb
Other Identifiers
ISSN
1471-2288
E-ISSN
1471-2288
DOI
10.1186/s12874-020-01190-w