A randomised controlled trial of an Intervention to Improve Compliance with the ARRIVE guidelines (IICARus).

IF 7.2 Q1 ETHICS Research integrity and peer review Pub Date : 2019-06-12 eCollection Date: 2019-01-01 DOI:10.1186/s41073-019-0069-3
Kaitlyn Hair, Malcolm R Macleod, Emily S Sena
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引用次数: 100

Abstract

Background: The ARRIVE (Animal Research: Reporting of In Vivo Experiments) guidelines are widely endorsed but compliance is limited. We sought to determine whether journal-requested completion of an ARRIVE checklist improves full compliance with the guidelines.

Methods: In a randomised controlled trial, manuscripts reporting in vivo animal research submitted to PLOS ONE (March-June 2015) were randomly allocated to either requested completion of an ARRIVE checklist or current standard practice. Authors, academic editors, and peer reviewers were blinded to group allocation. Trained reviewers performed outcome adjudication in duplicate by assessing manuscripts against an operationalised version of the ARRIVE guidelines that consists 108 items. Our primary outcome was the between-group differences in the proportion of manuscripts meeting all ARRIVE guideline checklist subitems.

Results: We randomised 1689 manuscripts (control: n = 844, intervention: n = 845), of which 1269 were sent for peer review and 762 (control: n = 340; intervention: n = 332) accepted for publication. No manuscript in either group achieved full compliance with the ARRIVE checklist. Details of animal husbandry (ARRIVE subitem 9b) was the only subitem to show improvements in reporting, with the proportion of compliant manuscripts rising from 52.1 to 74.1% (X 2 = 34.0, df = 1, p = 2.1 × 10-7) in the control and intervention groups, respectively.

Conclusions: These results suggest that altering the editorial process to include requests for a completed ARRIVE checklist is not enough to improve compliance with the ARRIVE guidelines. Other approaches, such as more stringent editorial policies or a targeted approach on key quality items, may promote improvements in reporting.

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一项旨在提高ARRIVE指南依从性的干预措施的随机对照试验(IICARus)。
背景:ARRIVE(动物研究:体内实验报告)指南得到了广泛认可,但合规性有限。我们试图确定期刊要求完成ARRIVE检查表是否能提高对指南的完全遵守。方法:在一项随机对照试验中,将提交给PLOS ONE(2015年3月至6月)的报告体内动物研究的手稿随机分配给要求完成ARRIVE检查表或当前标准实践。作者、学术编辑和同行评审对小组分配视而不见。经过培训的评审员通过对照由108个项目组成的ARRIVE指南的操作版本评估手稿,重复进行结果裁决。我们的主要结果是符合ARRIVE指南检查表所有子项目的手稿比例的组间差异。结果:我们对1689份手稿(对照组:n= 844,干预:n= 845),其中1269份被送往同行评审,762份(对照:n= 340;干预:n= 332)。任何一组的手稿都没有完全符合ARRIVE检查表。畜牧业细节(ARRIVE子项目9b)是唯一一个报告有所改进的子项目,合规手稿的比例从52.1%上升到74.1%(X2=34.0,df = 1,p= 2.1 × 10-7)。结论:这些结果表明,改变编辑流程以包括对完整ARRIVE检查表的要求不足以提高对ARRIVE指南的遵守程度。其他方法,如更严格的编辑政策或对关键质量项目采取有针对性的方法,可能会促进报告的改进。
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