Abstract

Background: To address concerns about the quality of reporting of randomized controlled trials, and the potential for biased treatment effects in poorly reported trials, medical journals have adopted a common set of reporting guidelines, the Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials (CONSORT) statement, to improve the reporting of randomized controlled trials. Hypothesis: The reporting of clinical trials involving dogs and cats might not be ideal, and this might be associated with biased treatment effects. Animals: Dogs and cats used in 100 randomly selected reports of clinical trials. Methods: Data related to methodological quality and completeness of reporting were extracted from each trial. Associations between reporting of trial features and the proportion of positive treatment effects within trials were evaluated by generalized linear models. Results: There were substantive deficiencies in reporting of key trial features. An increased proportion of positive treatment effects within a trial was associated with not reporting: the method used to generate the random allocation sequence ( P < .001), the use of double blinding ( P < .001), the inclusion criteria for study subjects ( P = .003), baseline differences between treatment groups ( P = .006), the measurement used for all outcomes ( P = .002), and possible study limitations ( P = .03). Conclusions and Clinical Importance: Many clinical trials involving dogs and cats in the literature do not report details related to methodological quality and aspects necessary to evaluate external validity. There is some evidence that these deficiencies are associated with treatment effects. There is a need to improve reporting of clinical trials, and guidelines, such as the CONSORT statement, can provide a valuable tool for meeting this need.

Keywords

MedicineBlindingConsolidated Standards of Reporting TrialsClinical trialRandomized controlled trialRandomizationClinical study designFamily medicineIntensive care medicineInternal medicine

MeSH Terms

AnimalsCat DiseasesCatsDog DiseasesDogsPublishingRandomized Controlled Trials as Topic

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
2009
Type
article
Volume
24
Issue
1
Pages
44-50
Citations
67
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

67
OpenAlex
5
Influential
51
CrossRef

Cite This

Jan M. Sargeant, Alastair M. Thompson, James Valcour et al. (2009). Quality of Reporting of Clinical Trials of Dogs and Cats and Associations with Treatment Effects. Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine , 24 (1) , 44-50. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1939-1676.2009.0386.x

Identifiers

DOI
10.1111/j.1939-1676.2009.0386.x
PMID
19807866

Data Quality

Data completeness: 90%