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Research waste from poor reporting of core methods and results and redundancy in studies of reporting guideline adherence: a meta-research review

Dal Santo, T.; Rice, D. B.; Amiri, L. S.; Tasleem, A.; Li, K.; Boruff, J. T.; Geoffroy, M.-C. B.; Benedetti, A.; Thombs, B.

2022-12-20 epidemiology
10.1101/2022.12.19.22283669 medRxiv
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ObjectivesWe investigated meta-research studies that evaluated adherence to prominent reporting guidelines (CONSORT, PRISMA, STARD, STROBE) in health research studies to determine the proportion that (1) provided an explanation for how complex guideline items were rated for adherence and (2) provided results from individual studies reviewed in addition to aggregate results. We also examined the conclusions of each meta-research study to assess redundancy of findings across studies. DesignCross-sectional meta-research review. Data sourcesMEDLINE (Ovid) searched on July 5, 2022. Eligibility criteria for selecting studiesStudies in any language were eligible if they used any version of the CONSORT, PRISMA, STARD, or STROBE reporting guidelines or their extensions to evaluate reporting in at least 10 human health research studies. We excluded studies that modified a reporting guideline or its items or evaluated fewer than half of reporting guideline items. Main outcomes were (1) the proportion of meta-research studies that provided a coding explanation that could be used to replicate the study or verify its results and (2) the proportion that provided individual-level study results in the main text, supplemental materials, or via an internet link. ResultsOf 148 included meta-research studies, 14 (10%, 95% confidence interval [CI] 6% to 15%) provided a fully replicable coding explanation, and 49 (33%, 95% CI 26% to 41%) completely reported individual study results. Of 90 studies that classified reporting as adequate or inadequate in the study abstract, 6 (7%, 95% CI 3% to 14%) concluded that reporting was adequate but none of those 6 studies provided information on how items were coded or provided item-level results for included studies. ConclusionsMuch of published meta-research on reporting in health research is likely wasteful. Few studies report enough information for verification or replication, and almost all find that reporting in health research studies is suboptimal. These findings highlight the importance of shifting the focus from assessing reporting adequacy to developing, testing, and implementing strategies to improve reporting. FundingThere was no specific funding for this study. ProtocolPosted on the Open Science Framework June 29, 2022 (https://osf.io/gtm4z/).

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