Susceptibility to Fraud in Systematic Reviews

Author:

Marret Emmanuel1,Elia Nadia2,Dahl Jørgen B.3,McQuay Henry J.4,Møiniche Steen5,Moore R Andrew6,Straube Sebastian7,Tramèr Martin R.8

Affiliation:

1. Research Associate, Division of Anesthesiology, University Hospitals of Geneva.

2. Research Associate.

3. Professor, Department of Anaesthesia, Centre of Head and Orthopaedics, Copenhagen University Hospital, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark.

4. Professor, Nuffield Department of Anaesthetics.

5. Consultant, Department of Anaesthesiology, Glostrup University Hospital, Copenhagen, Denmark.

6. Professor, Pain Research and Nuffield Department of Anaesthetics, University of Oxford, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, United Kingdom.

7. Physician-Scientist, Department of Occupational and Social Medicine, University of Göttingen, Göttingen, Germany.

8. Professor, Division of Anesthesiology, University Hospitals of Geneva, and Faculty of Medicine, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland.

Abstract

Background Dr. Scott Reuben allegedly fabricated data. The authors of the current article examined the impact of Reuben reports on conclusions of systematic reviews. Methods The authors searched in ISI Web of Knowledge systematic reviews citing Reuben reports. Systematic reviews were grouped into one of three categories: I, only cited but did not include Reuben reports; II, retrieved and considered, but eventually excluded Reuben reports; III, included Reuben reports. For quantitative systematic reviews (i.e., meta-analyses), a relevant difference was defined as a significant result becoming nonsignificant (or vice versa) by excluding Reuben reports. For qualitative systematic reviews, each author decided independently whether noninclusion of Reuben reports would have changed conclusions. Results Twenty-five systematic reviews (5 category I, 6 category II, 14 category III) cited 27 Reuben reports (published 1994-2007). Most tested analgesics in surgical patients. One of 6 quantitative category III reviews would have reached different conclusions without Reuben reports. In all 6 (30 subgroup analyses involving Reuben reports), exclusion of Reuben reports never made any difference when the number of patients from Reuben reports was less than 30% of all patients included in the analysis. Of 8 qualitative category III reviews, all authors agreed that one would certainly have reached different conclusions without Reuben reports. For another 4, the authors' judgment was not unanimous. Conclusions Carefully performed systematic reviews proved robust against the impact of Reuben reports. Quantitative systematic reviews were vulnerable if the fraudulent data were more than 30% of the total. Qualitative systematic reviews seemed at greater risk than quantitative.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

Reference46 articles.

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