High-cited favorable studies for COVID-19 treatments ineffective in large trials

被引:4
|
作者
Ioannidis, John P. A. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Stanford Univ, Meta Res Innovat Ctr Stanford METR, Dept Med, Epidemiol & Populat Hlth, Stanford, CA USA
[2] Stanford Prevent Res Ctr, Med Sch Off Bldg, Room X306, 1265 Welch Rd, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
关键词
Randomized controlled trials; Nonrandomized studies; COVID-19; Bias; Altmetric; citations; CONVALESCENT PLASMA; CITATION BIAS; COMBINATION;
D O I
10.1016/j.jclinepi.2022.04.001
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Objectives: To evaluate for coronavirus disease 2019 treatments without benefits in subsequent large randomized controlled trials (RCTs) how many of their most-cited clinical studies had declared favorable results. Study Design and Setting: Scopus searches (December 23, 2021) identified articles on lopinavir-ritonavir, hydroxychloroquine, azithromycin, remdesivir, convalescent plasma, colchicine, or interferon (index interventions) that represented clinical trials and had > 150 citations. Their conclusions were correlated with study design features. The 10 most recent citations for the most-cited article on each index intervention were examined on whether they were critical to the highly cited study. Altmetric scores were also obtained. Results: Forty eligible articles of clinical studies had received > 150 citations. Twenty of forty (50%) had favorable conclusions and four were equivocal. Highly cited articles with favorable conclusions were rarely RCTs (3/20), although those without favorable conclusions were mostly RCTs (15/20, P 5 0.0003). Only one RCT with favorable conclusions had > 160 patients. Citation counts correlated strongly with Altmetric scores, especially news items. Only nine (15%) of 60 recent citations to the most highly cited studies with favorable or equivocal conclusions were critical. Conclusion: Many clinical studies with favorable conclusions for largely ineffective coronavirus disease 2019 treatments are uncritically heavily cited and disseminated. Early observational studies and small randomized trials may cause spurious claims of effectiveness that get perpetuated. (c) 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:1 / 9
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] High-Cited Papers in Global COVID-19 Vaccine Research
    Gupta, B. M.
    Ahmed, K. K. Mueen
    Kappi, Mallikarjun M.
    Bansal, Madhu
    Bansal, Jivesh
    [J]. JOURNAL OF YOUNG PHARMACISTS, 2023, 15 (02) : 245 - 256
  • [2] High-Cited Papers in Global COVID-19 Vaccine Research
    Gupta, B. M.
    Ahmed, K. K. Mueen
    Kappi, Mallikarjun M.
    Bansal, Madhu
    Bansal, Jivesh
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL INVESTIGATION, 2023, 13 (03) : 605 - 616
  • [3] High-Cited Papers on Covid-19 Research: A Scientometric Analysis
    Dhawan, S. M.
    Surulinathi, M.
    Gupta, B. M.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF YOUNG PHARMACISTS, 2021, 13 (03) : S1 - S6
  • [4] Covid-19 and Aged People: A Scientometric Analysis of High-Cited Publications
    Surulinathi, M.
    Gupta, B. M.
    Kumari, N. Prasanna
    Bansal, Jivesh
    [J]. JOURNAL OF YOUNG PHARMACISTS, 2021, 13 (03) : S13 - S18
  • [5] High-Cited Papers in Covid-19: A Scientometric Assessment of Global Literature Using Essential Science Indicators Database
    Surulinathi, M.
    Kumari, N. Prasanna
    Gupta, B. M.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF YOUNG PHARMACISTS, 2021, 13 (03) : S7 - S12
  • [6] COVID-19 Disgraced COVID-19 studies are still routinely cited
    Piller, Charles
    [J]. SCIENCE, 2021, 371 (6527) : 331 - 332
  • [7] Treatments in the COVID-19 pandemic: an update on clinical trials
    Tao, Yanyi
    Tang, Liang V.
    Hu, Yu
    [J]. EXPERT OPINION ON EMERGING DRUGS, 2020, 25 (02) : 81 - 88
  • [8] Global Trends in Highly Cited Studies in COVID-19 Research
    Funada, Satoshi
    Yoshioka, Takashi
    Luo, Yan
    Iwama, Toshi
    Mori, Chikako
    Yamada, Naofumi
    Yoshida, Hideki
    Katanoda, Kota
    Furukawa, Toshi A.
    [J]. JAMA NETWORK OPEN, 2023, 6 (09) : E2332802
  • [9] Endpoints for randomized controlled clinical trials for COVID-19 treatments
    Dodd, Lori E.
    Follmann, Dean
    Wang, Jing
    Koenig, Franz
    Korn, Lisa L.
    Schoergenhofer, Christian
    Proschan, Michael
    Hunsberger, Sally
    Bonnett, Tyler
    Makowski, Mat
    Belhadi, Drifa
    Wang, Yeming
    Bin Cao
    Mentre, France
    Jaki, Thomas
    [J]. CLINICAL TRIALS, 2020, 17 (05) : 472 - 482
  • [10] Treatments for COVID-19
    Andrews, Hayden S.
    Herman, Jonathan D.
    Gandhi, Rajesh T.
    [J]. ANNUAL REVIEW OF MEDICINE, 2024, 75 : 145 - 157