在临床试验中建立诚信。

IF 2.1 4区 医学 Q2 NURSING Journal of midwifery & women's health Pub Date : 2024-11-22 DOI:10.1111/jmwh.13719
Melissa D. Avery CNM, PhD, Linda A. Hunter CNM, EdD, Ira Kantrowitz-Gordon CNM, PhD
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Trial registries can also be helpful to institutional review boards that are examining newly proposed studies.<span><sup>3</sup></span></p><p>Clinical trials are defined by ICMJE as “any research project that prospectively assigns people or a group of people to an intervention, with or without concurrent comparison or control groups, to study the relationship between a health-related intervention <i>and</i> a health outcome.”<span><sup>3</sup></span><sup>(p 1)</sup> The treatment or intervention may be pharmacologic, surgical, behavioral, dietary, educational, or changes in care processes. 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The World Health Organization (WHO) requires a specific set of items about trials to be included, such as a unique trial identifier (assigned by the registry), date of trial registration, first date of enrollment, information about study sponsors, inclusion and exclusion criteria, a description of the study information, complete information about the study methodology, and study results.<span><sup>5</sup></span> A statement on data sharing has been required by ICMJE for trials enrolling participants after January 2019.<span><sup>3</sup></span> This statement must include a description and plan for sharing de-identified data.<span><sup>5</sup></span></p><p>Trial registries are approved internationally by the WHO. Registries must adhere to WHO requirements, including being open to all prospective registrants, displaying all data included in the WHO trial data set, and never removing a trial once it is registered. Registries must be sure valid data are displayed including that the trial registrant exists, the trial exists, and that complete data are provided. In addition, registries must display data publicly, include a publicly available audit trail of any changes made to the study, make information accessible and searchable at no charge, assure there is no duplication of trials, have adequate technical support, and assure a level of administrative support.<span><sup>6</sup></span></p><p>Clinical trial research is more commonly seen in the medical science literature, and thus, reports are more likely to contain the appropriate registration information. Some researchers in nursing, midwifery, and fields other than medical science may be less familiar with the requirement to register clinical trials in order to publish their study results in scientific journals, leading to a lower liklihood of completing the process. 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Beyond a simple checkoff, <i>JMWH</i> editorial staff review all submitted manuscripts to determine if a clinical trial was conducted. If so, the manuscript is checked to see that the trial registry and the unique identifier are provided in the abstract and the methods section of the manuscript. The trial registry is examined to be sure registration occurred prior to the commencement of participant enrollment. <i>JMWH</i> also requires using a reporting guideline based on study type, usually the Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials (CONSORT)<span><sup>8</sup></span> in the case of a clinical trial.<span><sup>2</sup></span></p><p>The information described above should be familiar to authors before submitting a manuscript to <i>JMWH</i> or any other scientific journal. By confirming the author's awareness of the guidelines, the <i>JMWH</i> editorial team demonstrates our commitment to upholding scholarly standards. 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Trial registries can also be helpful to institutional review boards that are examining newly proposed studies.<span><sup>3</sup></span></p><p>Clinical trials are defined by ICMJE as “any research project that prospectively assigns people or a group of people to an intervention, with or without concurrent comparison or control groups, to study the relationship between a health-related intervention <i>and</i> a health outcome.”<span><sup>3</sup></span><sup>(p 1)</sup> The treatment or intervention may be pharmacologic, surgical, behavioral, dietary, educational, or changes in care processes. 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This gap in familiarity can result in authors mistakenly labeling study methodology as something other than a clinical trial when it meets the ICMJE definition. Identification as a clinical trial should be included in the manuscript title, which includes feasibility and pilot trials. Additionally, editorial processes and peer review play a crucial role in ensuring that studies meeting the clinical trial definition are properly registered as part of the review process.<span><sup>7</sup></span></p><p>Over the past year, <i>JMWH</i> guidance and review have been enhanced beyond stating that trial registration is required. Authors must review a statement when uploading their manuscript acknowledging that they are aware that clinical trial registration is required and confirm their agreement via a checkbox. Links to the ICMJE and WHO guidance, which include definitions and a listing of acceptable trial registries, are provided. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

助产学杂志;妇女健康(JMWH)领导层努力确保最高水平的学术出版,包括与科学诚信和卓越相关的国家和国际指导保持一致。自2005年7月1日起,国际医学杂志编辑委员会(ICMJE)建议注册所有临床试验临床试验注册是研究结果发表在符合ICMJE指南的期刊上的必要条件。因此,调查人员有责任确保他们的试验得到适当的登记。JMWH长期以来一直致力于遵循这些建议然而,一些作者可能不知道这些要求。因此,本文对背景和现行标准进行了综述。什么是临床试验注册?为什么它很重要?在国家或国际数据库中注册临床试验的目的是透明度和报告的完整性。当临床试验信息在参与者登记前公开时,对参与试验感兴趣的个人可以在可用的注册数据库中搜索机会。研究人员可以在他们的研究领域搜索正在进行的试验,以避免不必要的重复。临床试验注册的目的是防止研究报告的偏倚,例如只报告选定的结果。试验登记对正在审查新提出的研究的机构审查委员会也有帮助。临床试验被ICMJE定义为“任何研究项目,前瞻性地分配人或一组人进行干预,有或没有同时进行的对照组或对照组,以研究与健康相关的干预与健康结果之间的关系。”治疗或干预可以是药物、手术、行为、饮食、教育或护理过程的改变。可行性类型的研究将参与者分配给单一治疗而没有对照组或对照组,也被认为是临床试验注册的目的对临床试验注册日期的检查可以向公众保证,在参与者入组之前已向注册中心提供了信息,这对于防止报告偏差至关重要。临床试验的注册涉及研究者向批准的注册中心提供有关试验的具体信息例如,Clinicaltrials.gov是一个由国家医学图书馆维护的试验注册数据库,其中包含有关在美国和许多其他国家进行的试验的信息。世界卫生组织(WHO)要求纳入一组关于试验的特定项目,如唯一试验标识符(由注册中心分配)、试验注册日期、首次入组日期、研究发起者信息、纳入和排除标准、研究信息描述、研究方法的完整信息和研究结果ICMJE要求在2019年1月之后招募参与者的试验提供数据共享声明,该声明必须包括共享去识别数据的描述和计划。试验登记是由世界卫生组织在国际上批准的。注册中心必须遵守世卫组织的要求,包括向所有潜在注册人开放,显示世卫组织试验数据集中包含的所有数据,并且一旦注册就不得删除试验。注册中心必须确保显示有效数据,包括试验注册人存在、试验存在以及提供了完整的数据。此外,注册中心必须公开显示数据,包括对研究所做的任何更改的公开审计跟踪,使信息可免费访问和搜索,确保没有重复试验,有足够的技术支持,并确保一定程度的行政支持。临床试验研究在医学文献中更为常见,因此,报告更有可能包含适当的注册信息。一些护理、助产和医学以外领域的研究人员可能不太熟悉注册临床试验的要求,以便在科学期刊上发表他们的研究结果,导致完成这一过程的可能性较低。这种熟悉程度的差距可能导致作者错误地将研究方法标记为符合ICMJE定义的临床试验以外的东西。鉴定为临床试验应包括在稿件标题,其中包括可行性和试点试验。此外,编辑过程和同行评审在确保符合临床试验定义的研究作为评审过程的一部分得到适当注册方面发挥着至关重要的作用。在过去的一年中,JMWH的指导和审查已经得到了加强,不再只是说明需要进行试验注册。 作者在上传稿件时必须审查一份声明,承认他们知道需要进行临床试验注册,并通过复选框确认他们的同意。提供了ICMJE和世卫组织指南的链接,其中包括定义和可接受的试验登记清单。除了简单的核对外,JMWH编辑人员还会审查所有提交的手稿,以确定是否进行了临床试验。如果是,检查稿件,看是否在摘要和方法部分提供了试验注册表和唯一标识符。对试验注册中心进行检查,以确保在参与者登记开始之前进行了注册。JMWH还要求使用基于研究类型的报告指南,通常是临床试验报告的综合标准(CONSORT)8。在向JMWH或任何其他科学期刊投稿之前,作者应熟悉上述信息。通过确认作者对指南的了解,JMWH编辑团队表明了我们对维护学术标准的承诺。此外,试验注册日期的确认确保了与ICMJE指南的一致性,为期刊在稿件提交时验证作者提供的信息提供了一种机制。我们分享这些信息的目的是让读者、审稿人和作者了解JMWH的流程,以进一步提高期刊和投稿稿件的质量。
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Building Integrity and Trust in Clinical Trials

The Journal of Midwifery & Women's Health (JMWH) leadership strives to ensure the highest level of scholarly publication, including consistency with national and international guidance related to scientific integrity and excellence. Since July 1, 2005, the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) has recommended registration of all clinical trials.1 Clinical trial registration is necessary for study results to be published in journals that adhere to the ICMJE guidelines. Thus, investigators are responsible for ensuring their trials have been appropriately registered. JMWH has a long history of commitment to following these recommendations.2 Some authors, however, may be unaware of the requirements. Therefore, the background and current standards are reviewed here.

What is clinical trial registration and why is it important? The purposes of registration of clinical trials in a national or international database are transparency and reporting integrity. When clinical trial information is publicly available before participant enrollment, individuals interested in trial participation can search opportunities in available registry databases. Researchers can search ongoing trials in their area of study to avoid unnecessary duplication. Clinical trial registration aims to prevent bias in the reporting of research such as only reporting selected outcomes. Trial registries can also be helpful to institutional review boards that are examining newly proposed studies.3

Clinical trials are defined by ICMJE as “any research project that prospectively assigns people or a group of people to an intervention, with or without concurrent comparison or control groups, to study the relationship between a health-related intervention and a health outcome.”3(p 1) The treatment or intervention may be pharmacologic, surgical, behavioral, dietary, educational, or changes in care processes. Feasibility type studies that assign participants to a single treatment without a control or comparison group are also considered clinical trials for the purpose of trial registration.3 Examination of the clinical trial registration date can assure the public that information was provided to the registry before enrollment of participants, which is essential to preventing bias in reporting.

Registration of a clinical trial involves investigators providing specific information about the trial to an approved registry.4 For example, Clinicaltrials.gov is a trial registry database maintained by the National Library of Medicine and contains information about trials conducted in the United States and many other countries. The World Health Organization (WHO) requires a specific set of items about trials to be included, such as a unique trial identifier (assigned by the registry), date of trial registration, first date of enrollment, information about study sponsors, inclusion and exclusion criteria, a description of the study information, complete information about the study methodology, and study results.5 A statement on data sharing has been required by ICMJE for trials enrolling participants after January 2019.3 This statement must include a description and plan for sharing de-identified data.5

Trial registries are approved internationally by the WHO. Registries must adhere to WHO requirements, including being open to all prospective registrants, displaying all data included in the WHO trial data set, and never removing a trial once it is registered. Registries must be sure valid data are displayed including that the trial registrant exists, the trial exists, and that complete data are provided. In addition, registries must display data publicly, include a publicly available audit trail of any changes made to the study, make information accessible and searchable at no charge, assure there is no duplication of trials, have adequate technical support, and assure a level of administrative support.6

Clinical trial research is more commonly seen in the medical science literature, and thus, reports are more likely to contain the appropriate registration information. Some researchers in nursing, midwifery, and fields other than medical science may be less familiar with the requirement to register clinical trials in order to publish their study results in scientific journals, leading to a lower liklihood of completing the process. This gap in familiarity can result in authors mistakenly labeling study methodology as something other than a clinical trial when it meets the ICMJE definition. Identification as a clinical trial should be included in the manuscript title, which includes feasibility and pilot trials. Additionally, editorial processes and peer review play a crucial role in ensuring that studies meeting the clinical trial definition are properly registered as part of the review process.7

Over the past year, JMWH guidance and review have been enhanced beyond stating that trial registration is required. Authors must review a statement when uploading their manuscript acknowledging that they are aware that clinical trial registration is required and confirm their agreement via a checkbox. Links to the ICMJE and WHO guidance, which include definitions and a listing of acceptable trial registries, are provided. Beyond a simple checkoff, JMWH editorial staff review all submitted manuscripts to determine if a clinical trial was conducted. If so, the manuscript is checked to see that the trial registry and the unique identifier are provided in the abstract and the methods section of the manuscript. The trial registry is examined to be sure registration occurred prior to the commencement of participant enrollment. JMWH also requires using a reporting guideline based on study type, usually the Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials (CONSORT)8 in the case of a clinical trial.2

The information described above should be familiar to authors before submitting a manuscript to JMWH or any other scientific journal. By confirming the author's awareness of the guidelines, the JMWH editorial team demonstrates our commitment to upholding scholarly standards. Additionally, confirmation of the date of trial registration ensures consistency with ICMJE guidelines, providing a mechanism for journals to verify author-provided information at the time of manuscript submission. Our goal in sharing this information is to inform readers, reviewers, and authors about the JMWH process with the aim of further enhancing the quality of both the Journal and the manuscripts submitted for publication.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
7.40%
发文量
103
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Midwifery & Women''s Health (JMWH) is a bimonthly, peer-reviewed journal dedicated to the publication of original research and review articles that focus on midwifery and women''s health. JMWH provides a forum for interdisciplinary exchange across a broad range of women''s health issues. Manuscripts that address midwifery, women''s health, education, evidence-based practice, public health, policy, and research are welcomed
期刊最新文献
Issue Information Challenges in Antenatal Care (2024-002JMWH) Center M Pilot Trial: Integrating Preventive Mental Health Care in Routine Prenatal Care Challenges for Antepartum Care of the Individual with Perinatal Substance Use: An Empirical Integrative Review of Novel Approaches to Improve Care Family-Centered Antenatal Care With a Life-Limiting Fetal Condition: A Developmental Theory-Guided Approach
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