Issues in the reporting of epidemiological studies: a survey of recent practice
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 6 October 2004
- Vol. 329 (7471), 883-887
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.38250.571088.55
Abstract
Objectives To review current practice in the analysis and reporting of epidemiological research and to identify limitations. Design Examination of articles published in January 2001 that investigated associations between risk factors/exposure variables and disease events/measures in individuals. Setting Eligible English language journals including all major epidemiological journals, all major general medical journals, and the two leading journals in cardiovascular disease and cancer. Main outcome measure Each article was evaluated with a standard proforma. Results We found 73 articles in observational epidemiology; most were either cohort or case-control studies. Most studies looked at cancer and cardiovascular disease, even after we excluded specialty journals. Quantitative exposure variables predominated, which were mostly analysed as ordered categories but with little consistency or explanation regarding choice of categories. Sample selection, participant refusal, and data quality received insufficient attention in many articles. Statistical analyses commonly used odds ratios (38 articles) and hazard/rate ratios (23), with some inconsistent use of terminology. Confidence intervals were reported in most studies (68), though use of P values was less common (38). Few articles explained their choice of confounding variables; many performed subgroup analyses claiming an effect modifier, though interaction tests were rare. Several investigated multiple associations between exposure and outcome, increasing the likelihood of false positive claims. There was evidence of publication bias. Conclusions This survey raises concerns regarding inadequacies in the analysis and reporting of epidemiological publications in mainstream journals.Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- Sifting the evidence---what's wrong with significance tests? Another comment on the role of statistical methodsBMJ, 2001
- Bone Mass and the Risk of Colon Cancer among Postmenopausal WomenAmerican Journal of Epidemiology, 2001
- Reporting of occupational and environmental research: use and misuse of statistical and epidemiological methodsOccupational and Environmental Medicine, 2000
- Writing for EpidemiologyEpidemiology, 1998
- That Confounded P-ValueEpidemiology, 1998
- ResponseJNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1994
- Re: Dangers of Using "Optimal" Cutpoints in the Evaluation of Prognostic FactorsJNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1994
- Practical Considerations in Choosing between the Case-Cohort and Nested Case-Control DesignsEpidemiology, 1991
- Relation of pooled logistic regression to time dependent cox regression analysis: The framingham heart studyStatistics in Medicine, 1990
- Publication of “negative” epidemiological studiesJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1987