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Methodological rigour in preclinical urology: a systematic review reporting research quality over a 14-year period

Authors
 Seung Hyun Park  ;  Se Bee Lee  ;  Seoyeon Park  ;  Eun Young Kim  ;  Damiano Pizzol  ;  Mike Trott  ;  Yvonne Barnett  ;  Ai Koyanagi  ;  Louis Jacob  ;  Pinar Soysal  ;  Nicola Veronese  ;  Simona Ippoliti  ;  Ramy Abou Ghayda  ;  Nannan Thirumavalavan  ;  Adonis Hijaz  ;  David Sheyn  ;  Rachel Pope  ;  Britt Conroy  ;  Irina Jaeger  ;  Gupta Shubham  ;  Amihay Nevo  ;  Petre Cristian Ilie  ;  Seung Won Lee  ;  Dong Keon Yon  ;  Hyun Ho Han  ;  Sung Hwi Hong  ;  Jae Il Shin  ;  Lee Ponsky  ;  Lee Smith 
Citation
 BJU INTERNATIONAL, Vol.133(4) : 387-399, 2024-04 
Journal Title
BJU INTERNATIONAL
ISSN
 1464-4096 
Issue Date
2024-04
MeSH
Animals ; Biomedical Research / standards ; Humans ; Research Design* / standards ; Urology*
Keywords
animal models ; methodological rigour ; preclinical studies ; reproducibility of results ; urological disease
Abstract
Objective: To investigate the prevalence and trends of essential study design elements in preclinical urological studies, as well as key factors that may improve methodological rigour, as the demand for methodological rigour in preclinical studies is increasing since research reproducibility and transparency in the medico-scientific field are being questioned.

Methods and results: PubMed was searched to include preclinical urological studies published between July 2007 to June 2021. A total of 3768 articles met the inclusion criteria. Data on study design elements and animal models used were collected. Citation density was also examined as a surrogate marker of study influence. We performed an analysis of the prevalence of seven critical study design elements and temporal patterns over 14 years. Randomisation was reported in 50.0%, blinding in 15.0%, sample size estimation in 1.0%, inclusion of both sexes in 6.3%, statistical analysis in 97.1%, housing and husbandry in 47.7%, and inclusion/exclusion criteria in 5.0%. Temporal analysis showed that the implementation of these study design elements has increased, except for inclusion of both sexes and inclusion/exclusion criteria. Reporting study design elements were associated with increased citation density in randomisation and statistical analysis.

Conclusions: The risk of bias is prevalent in 14-year publications describing preclinical urological research, and the quality of methodological rigour is barely related to the citation density of the article. Yet five study design elements (randomisation, blinding, sample size estimation, statistical analysis, and housing and husbandry) proposed by both the National Institutes of Health and Animal Research: Reporting of In Vivo Experiments guidelines have been either well reported or are being well reported over time.
Full Text
https://bjui-journals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/bju.16171
DOI
10.1111/bju.16171
Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Pediatrics (소아과학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Urology (비뇨의학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Shin, Jae Il(신재일) ORCID logo https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2326-1820
Han, Hyun Ho(한현호) ORCID logo https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6268-0860
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/201160
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