Transparency in Clinical Trials: adding value to Paediatric Dental Research - Cenci - - International Journal of Paediatric Dentistry - Wiley Online Library

peter.suber's bookmarks 2020-12-20

Summary:

Abstract:  Background

Even though considered as studies with high methodological power, many RCTs in paediatric dentistry do not have essential quality items in their design, development and report, making results’ reliability questionable, replication challenging to conduct, wasting time, money and efforts, and even exposing the participants to research for no benefit.

Aim

We addressed the main topics related to transparency in clinical research, with an emphasis in paediatric dentistry.

Design

We searched for all controlled clinical trials published from January 2019 up to July 2020 in the three paediatric dentistry journals with high journal Impact Factor, indexed on Medline. These papers were assessed for transparency according to Open Science practices and regarding reporting accuracy using some items required by CONSORT.

Results

53.6% of the studies declared registration, 75% had sample size calculation, 98.2% reported randomisation, and from those, 65.4% explained the randomisation method. Besides that, no study shared their data, and 6.8% were published in open access format.

Conclusions

Unfortunately, a large proportion of RCTs in paediatric dental research show a lack of transparency and reproducibility.

Link:

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ipd.12769

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » peter.suber's bookmarks

Tags:

oa.new oa.medicine oa.dentistry oa.clinical_trials oa.paywalled oa.reproducibility oa.pharma oa.negative

Date tagged:

12/20/2020, 15:56

Date published:

12/20/2020, 10:57