Abstract
Objectives
Study Design and Setting
Results
Conclusion
Keywords
- •Most studies using routinely collected health data (RCD) are insufficiently reported. For example, it is frequently impossible to know which exposure or intervention is associated with which outcome in which population or minimal prerequisites for replication/assessment of scientific validity are often lacking.
Key findings
- •Even years after introducing reporting guidelines for observational studies, many studies from various clinical and epidemiologic areas are poorly reported.
What this adds to what was known?
- •Specific reporting guidelines for studies using RCD are necessary to address specific characteristics of such research.
- •Authors, peer reviewers, and editors need training to apply both novel and established reporting guidelines to ensure better and more complete research reporting.
What is the implication and what should change now?
1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1 Eligibility of studies
2.2 Literature search
2.3 Study selection
2.4 Extraction of study characteristics
Supporting journals & organisations. Secondary supporting journals & organisations, 2016. Available at http://www.strobe-statement.org/index.php?id=strobe-endorsement. Accessed March 11, 2016.
2.5 Evaluation of reporting quality
2.5.1 Selection and development of reporting items
Item | Description |
---|---|
[S1] | Is the study's design indicated with a commonly used term in the title or the abstract? We accepted any term for study designs (such as “cohort study” or “case–control study”) used in typical study classification schemes [18] . |
[R1] | Is the use of routinely collected data or registry data clearly mentioned in the title or the abstract using common terms? We evaluated whether information in the title or abstract allows a reader or a database search engine to clearly recognize the use of routinely collected or registry data. |
[S2] | Are the selection criteria for the analyzed participants clearly described? This was deemed adequate when the study participant selection was reported in a way that it would be clear to whom the results directly apply and for whom they would not be applicable. |
[R2] | Is the coding/classification of patients clearly described with sufficient details? We deemed reporting adequate when the description of the coding or classification algorithm was sufficiently clear to allow replication of the analysis. |
[S3] | Are all interventions/exposures of interest clearly described? We deemed an exposure or intervention (or risk factor, predictor, effect modifier, and so forth) sufficiently described when the provided details would allow the application of the intervention or the measurement of exposure (or risk factor and so forth) in practice. The reader should know precisely which action (e.g., prescription of a certain dose of a drug) or exposure is being assessed in the study [19] . |
[R3] | Is the coding/classification of the interventions/exposures clearly described with sufficient details? We deemed reporting adequate when the description of the coding or classification algorithm was sufficiently clear to allow replication of the analysis. |
[S4] | Are all outcomes of interest clearly described? The outcome description was deemed adequate if it was equivalent to an outcome description in a planned prospective study designed to specifically investigate the issue (regardless whether such study would be interventional or observational, feasible or not) and if the detail given was sufficient for others to replicate the study. We did not assess if broad or specific outcomes were used, but we assessed if the reporting clearly defined the outcome and how it was measured and defined. For example, we deemed it insufficient when authors reported “we analyzed effects on hypertension” without giving a definition of hypertension (e.g., defined by more than one prescription of an antihypertensive drug within 6 months); or when authors say “we evaluated effects on mortality” without stating whether all-cause or cause-specific mortality has been investigated and without reporting the time-frame (e.g., in-hospital mortality or 30-day-after discharge mortality). |
[R4] | Is the coding/classification of the outcomes clearly described with sufficient details? We deemed reporting adequate when the description of the coding or classification algorithm was sufficiently clear to allow replication of the analysis. We deemed it unnecessary for replication that all-cause mortality is operationalized with a specific code because this outcome is typically clear. |
[S5] | Are the independent variables in analytic models (1) listed (or are the strategies used to create models reported)? We deemed reporting adequate when all analyzed variables (e.g., age, body weight, smoking) were listed. (2) described in sufficient detail (including categorization) to replicate the study? We deemed reporting adequate when details were provided on how the variables were included in the statistical models (e.g., age and body weight both as continuous variable and smoking as categorical variable such as “never smokers,” “previous smokers,” “smoking 1 to 10 cigarettes daily,” and “smoking more than 11 cigarettes daily”). |
[R5] | Are the characteristics of the analyzed data sets clearly described, including (1) covered time period, (2) location, (3) setting, and other potentially important factors? We deemed that reporting was adequate when the covered time period, geographic location, care setting, and other potentially important factors (e.g., essential details about type of data used; decision on a case-by-case basis) were reported. |
[R6] | Are the methods of linkage of databases clearly described (if applicable)? |
[R7] | Are issues of data sharing clearly addressed, i.e., whether the data set is publicly available (or shared on request)? We accepted any statement regardless of how detailed it was. |
[R8] | Is the validation of classification algorithms used for patients, interventions/outcomes/exposures described (if applicable)? |
2.5.2 Reporting items
2.6 Statistical analysis
3. Results
3.1 Selection and characteristics of studies
Characteristics | Studies, n (%) |
---|---|
Studies (n) | 124 (100) |
Number of routine data sources | |
Single data source | 74 (59.7) |
2 data sources | 24 (19.4) |
3 data sources | 9 (7.3) |
4 data sources | 9 (7.3) |
5 or more data sources | 8 (6.5) |
Type of routine data | |
Administrative data, not health | 26 (21.0) |
Administrative health data | 40 (32.3) |
Prescription data | 13 (10.5) |
Other administrative health data | 37 (29.8) |
EMR/EHR | 19 (15.3) |
Registry | 70 (56.5) |
Disease registry | 64 (51.6) |
Device registry | 7 (5.6) |
Other | 14 (12.1) |
Area of research | |
Clinical/medical | 25 (20.2) |
Epidemiology | 91 (73.4) |
Other or both areas | 8 (6.5) |
Statistical analyses | |
Multivariable analyses | 81 (65.3) |
Propensity scores | 5 (4.0) |
Other or purely descriptive | 43 (34.7) |
Type of condition | |
Cancer | 35 (28.2) |
Cardiovascular disease | 17 (13.7) |
Endocrinology | 6 (4.8) |
Nephrology | 3 (2.4) |
Neurology/psychiatry | 10 (8.1) |
Other or healthy participants | 53 (42.7) |
Citation impact | |
IF 2012 (median, IQR) (range), n = 118 | 3.12 (2.16; 4.16) [0.15–25.12] |
Citations (median, IQR) (range), n = 124 | 5 (2; 10.5) [0–68] |
Endorsement of STROBE | 17 (13.7) |
3.2 Reporting quality
Reporting item | Reporting adequate | Studies, n | Interrater agreement (%) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Yes, n (%) | Partly, n (%) | No, n (%) | |||
STROBE related | |||||
[S1] Study design in title or abstract | 39 (31.5) | 7 (5.6) | 78 (62.9) | 124 | 73.1 |
[S2] Selection criteria of participants | 92 (74.2) | 18 (14.5) | 14 (11.3) | 124 | 77.6 |
[S3] Details on interventions/exposures | 86 (77.5) | 13 (11.7) | 12 (10.8) | 111 | 69.2 |
[S4] Details on outcomes | 87 (75.7) | 19 (16.5) | 9 (7.8) | 115 | 78.5 |
[S5a] Variables used for analyses listed | 54 (66.7) | 15 (18.5) | 12 (14.8) | 81 | 66.2 |
[S5b] … described in sufficient detail | 34 (42) | 10 (12.3) | 37 (45.7) | 81 | 50.6 |
RCD related | |||||
[R1] Use of RCD/registry data in title/abstract | 89 (71.8) | 1 (0.8) | 34 (27.4) | 124 | 75.2 |
[R2] Coding of participants | 26 (41.9) | 3 (4.8) | 33 (53.2) | 62 | 74.1 |
[R3] Coding of interventions/exposures | 20 (36.4) | 3 (5.5) | 32 (58.2) | 55 | 57.7 |
[R4] Coding of outcomes | 29 (53.7) | 2 (3.7) | 23 (42.6) | 54 | 74.0 |
[R5] Characteristics of data source | 75 (60.5) | 32 (25.8) | 17 (13.7) | 124 | 73.0 |
[R6] Methods of data linkage | 12 (29.3) | 1 (2.4) | 28 (68.3) | 41 | 92.3 |
[R7] Data availability/sharing | 3 (2.4) | 2 (1.6) | 119 (96) | 124 | 87.8 |
[R8] Validation of classification algorithms | 13 (19.7) | 3 (4.6) | 50 (75.8) | 66 | 82.3 |
3.3 Association with journal IF and citation count
Reporting item | Reporting adequate | Impact factor 2012 | P-value | Citations per article | P-value | Studies (n) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
STROBE related | ||||||
[S1] Study design in title or abstract | Yes | 3.4 (1.9; 4.5) | 0.87 | 5 (2; 11) | 0.427 | 39 |
No | 3 (2.3; 3.9) | 4 (2; 9) | 78 | |||
[S2] Selection criteria of participants | Yes | 3.1 (2.1; 4.5) | 0.737 | 5 (2; 9.5) | 0.973 | 92 |
No | 3.2 (2.8; 3.9) | 7 (4; 15) | 14 | |||
[S3] Details on interventions/exposures | Yes | 3.3 (2.2; 4.3) | 0.733 | 5 (2; 11) | 0.268 | 86 |
No | 3.1 (2.5; 3.2) | 3 (1; 9.5) | 12 | |||
[S4] Details on outcomes | Yes | 3.4 (2.2; 4.5) | 0.047 | 5 (2; 11) | 0.057 | 87 |
No | 2.6 (1.9; 3.4) | 4 (1; 10) | 9 | |||
[S5a] Variables used for analyses listed | Yes | 3.5 (2.2; 4.9) | 0.027 | 5 (2; 12) | 0.223 | 54 |
No | 3.2 (2.6; 4.2) | 4.5 (2; 13) | 12 | |||
[S5b] … described in sufficient detail | Yes | 3.7 (2.4; 5.1) | 0.013 | 6 (3; 11) | 0.277 | 34 |
No | 3.2 (2.2; 4.2) | 6 (2; 13) | 37 | |||
RCD related | ||||||
[R1] Use of RCD/registry data in title/abstract | Yes | 3.3 (2.1; 4.4) | 0.554 | 5 (2; 10) | 0.876 | 89 |
No | 2.9 (2.3; 3.4) | 3.5 (2; 9) | 34 | |||
[R2] Coding of participants | Yes | 3.6 (2.8; 5.6) | 0.006 | 5.5 (3; 11) | 0.427 | 26 |
No | 2.5 (1.9; 3.7) | 2 (1; 7) | 33 | |||
[R3] Coding of interventions/exposures | Yes | 3.5 (2.3; 4.7) | 0.081 | 5.5 (2.5; 15) | 0.259 | 20 |
No | 2.3 (1.9; 3.7) | 3 (1; 7) | 32 | |||
[R4] Coding of outcomes | Yes | 3.6 (2.2; 5.2) | 0.11 | 5 (3; 7) | 0.882 | 29 |
No | 2.6 (2.2; 3.3) | 3 (1; 11) | 23 | |||
[R5] Characteristics of data source | Yes | 3.1 (2.2; 4.3) | 0.538 | 4 (2; 11) | 0.471 | 75 |
No | 2.8 (2.2; 3.7) | 6 (1; 11) | 17 | |||
[R6] Methods of data linkage | Yes | 2.8 (2.1; 4.8) | 0.963 | 4.5 (3; 10) | 12 | |
No | 3.3 (2.1; 4.5) | 5 (2; 10) | 0.932 | 28 | ||
[R7] Data availability/sharing | Yes | 17.2 (2.4; 18) | 0.108 | 14 (4; 19) | 0.135 | 3 |
No | 3.1 (2.2; 4.1) | 4 (2; 10) | 119 | |||
[R8] Validation of classification algorithms | Yes | 3.5 (2.5; 5.4) | 0.206 | 6 (4; 8) | 0.466 | 13 |
No | 2.7 (2.2; 4.2) | 3.5 (1; 8) | 50 |
4. Discussion
Acknowledgments
Supplementary data
- Webappendices 1–3
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Article info
Publication history
Footnotes
Funding: This work was supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (grant number 130512). L.G.H. and M.B. were supported by Santésuisse and the Gottfried and Julia Bangerter-Rhyner Foundation. E.I.B. is supported by a Career Development Award from the Canadian Child Health Clinician Scientist Program and a New Investigator Award from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, Canadian Association of Gastroenterology, and Crohn's and Colitis Canada. S.M.L. is supported by a National Institute for Health Research Clinician Scientist award from the UK Department of Health. E.H. is supported by a Wellcome Trust grant (grant number 098504/Z/12/Z).
Conflict of interest: All authors have completed the Unified Competing Interest form at www.icmje.org/coi_disclosure.pdf. L.G.H., S.M.L., E.v.E., J.M.J., and E.I.B. are members of the RECORD initiative. E.v.E. is coconvenor of the STROBE initiative. All other authors declare no financial relationships with any organization that might have an interest in the submitted work in the previous 3 years, and no other relationships or activities that could appear to have influenced the submitted work.
The findings and conclusions in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the UK Department of Health.
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