Abstract

The consolidation of scientific knowledge proceeds through the interpretation and then distillation of data presented in research reports, first in review articles and then in textbooks and undergraduate courses, until truths become accepted as such both amongst "experts" and in the public understanding. Where data are collected but remain unpublished, they cannot contribute to this distillation of knowledge. If these unpublished data differ substantially from published work, conclusions may not reflect adequately the underlying biological effects being described. The existence and any impact of such "publication bias" in the laboratory sciences have not been described. Using the CAMARADES (Collaborative Approach to Meta-analysis and Review of Animal Data in Experimental Studies) database we identified 16 systematic reviews of interventions tested in animal studies of acute ischaemic stroke involving 525 unique publications. Only ten publications (2%) reported no significant effects on infarct volume and only six (1.2%) did not report at least one significant finding. Egger regression and trim-and-fill analysis suggested that publication bias was highly prevalent (present in the literature for 16 and ten interventions, respectively) in animal studies modelling stroke. Trim-and-fill analysis suggested that publication bias might account for around one-third of the efficacy reported in systematic reviews, with reported efficacy falling from 31.3% to 23.8% after adjustment for publication bias. We estimate that a further 214 experiments (in addition to the 1,359 identified through rigorous systematic review; non publication rate 14%) have been conducted but not reported. It is probable that publication bias has an important impact in other animal disease models, and more broadly in the life sciences.

Keywords

Publication biasMeta-analysisSystematic reviewPsychological interventionFunnel plotReporting biasMEDLINEImpact factorClinical study designBiologyPsychologyMedicineBioinformaticsClinical trialPathologyPsychiatry

MeSH Terms

AnimalsDisease ModelsAnimalHumansMeta-Analysis as TopicModelsStatisticalPublication BiasReview Literature as TopicStrokeTreatment Outcome

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Publication Info

Year
2010
Type
article
Volume
8
Issue
3
Pages
e1000344-e1000344
Citations
577
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

577
OpenAlex
19
Influential
473
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Cite This

Emily S. Sena, H. Bart van der Worp, Philip M. Bath et al. (2010). Publication Bias in Reports of Animal Stroke Studies Leads to Major Overstatement of Efficacy. PLoS Biology , 8 (3) , e1000344-e1000344. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1000344

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pbio.1000344
PMID
20361022
PMCID
PMC2846857

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%