Should Unpublished Data Be Included in Meta-analyses?
- 2 June 1993
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in JAMA
- Vol. 269 (21) , 2749-2753
- https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.1993.03500210049030
Abstract
Objective. —To identify the extent to which meta-analyses currently include unpublished data and whether editors, meta-analysts, and methodologists believe unpublished material should be included. Design. —This article describes two related studies: a literature review and a cross-sectional survey. Sample Selection. —For the literature review, we identified all articles indexed by the key word meta-analysis from January 1989 to February 1991 and determined whether unpublished material had been searched for, obtained, and included in the meta-analyses. For the cross-sectional survey, we surveyed authors of these meta-analyses, authors of articles addressing methodological issues in metaanalysis published during the same period, and editors of journals in which both types of articles were published. Intervention. —We asked the respondents about their attitudes concerning inclusion of unpublished data and publication of articles from which data had previously been included in a scientific overview. Main Outcome Measures. —Inclusion of unpublished data and opinions about whether unpublished material should be included in overviews and whether prior inclusion of data in an overview should bear on publication. Results. —Of 150 meta-analyses, 46 (30.7%) included unpublished data in their primary analysis. Of authors surveyed, 85% responded. Of the meta-analysts and methodologists, 77.7% felt that unpublished material should definitely or probably be included in scientific overviews; this was true of 46.9% of the editors. A total of 86.4% of the meta-analysts and methodologists and 53.2% of the editors felt that inclusion of data in a prior overview should have no bearing on full publication of original research. Conclusion. —While inclusion of unpublished data in scientific overviews remains controversial, most investigators directly involved in meta-analysis believe that unpublished data should not be systematically excluded. The most valid synthesis of available information will result when meta-analysts subject published and unpublished material to the same rigorous methodological evaluation and present results with and without unpublished sources of data. (JAMA. 1993;269:2749-2753)This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Publication bias in clinical researchThe Lancet, 1991
- How many studies are in the file drawer? An estimate from the family/marital psychotherapy literatureClinical Psychology Review, 1989
- Publication Bias and Dissemination of Clinical ResearchJNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1989
- Publication bias and clinical trialsControlled Clinical Trials, 1987
- Meta-Analysis in Clinical ResearchAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1987
- The Medical Review Article: State of the ScienceAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1987
- Publication bias: the case for an international registry of clinical trials.Journal of Clinical Oncology, 1986
- Publication prejudices: An experimental study of confirmatory bias in the peer review systemCognitive Therapy and Research, 1977
- Peer review in biomedical publicationThe American Journal of Medicine, 1974
- A Note on Fatality in Serum HepatitisGastroenterology, 1965