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Testing for the presence of positive-outcome bias in peer review: a randomized controlled trial
- Source :
- Archives of internal medicine. 170(21)
- Publication Year :
- 2010
-
Abstract
- If positive-outcome bias exists, it threatens the integrity of evidence-based medicine.We sought to determine whether positive-outcome bias is present during peer review by testing whether peer reviewers would (1) recommend publication of a "positive" version of a fabricated manuscript over an otherwise identical "no-difference" version, (2) identify more purposefully placed errors in the no-difference version, and (3) rate the "Methods" section in the positive version more highly than the identical "Methods" section in the no-difference version. Two versions of a well-designed randomized controlled trial that differed only in the direction of the finding of the principal study end point were submitted for peer review to 2 journals in 2008-2009. Of 238 reviewers for The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery and Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research randomly allocated to review either a positive or a no-difference version of the manuscript, 210 returned reviews.Reviewers were more likely to recommend the positive version of the test manuscript for publication than the no-difference version (97.3% vs 80.0%, P.001). Reviewers detected more errors in the no-difference version than in the positive version (0.85 vs 0.41, P.001). Reviewers awarded higher methods scores to the positive manuscript than to the no-difference manuscript (8.24 vs 7.53, P = .005), although the "Methods" sections in the 2 versions were identical.Positive-outcome bias was present during peer review. A fabricated manuscript with a positive outcome was more likely to be recommended for publication than was an otherwise identical no-difference manuscript.
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_specialty
Joint surgery
business.industry
education
MEDLINE
Evidence-based medicine
Publication bias
Outcome (probability)
law.invention
Test (assessment)
Surgery
Clinical trial
Logistic Models
Randomized controlled trial
law
Family medicine
Outcome Assessment, Health Care
Internal Medicine
medicine
Humans
Periodicals as Topic
business
Publication Bias
Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15383679
- Volume :
- 170
- Issue :
- 21
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Archives of internal medicine
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....0216de19b3e7dd27bbda0ec6ba4f99a3