Duplicate publication of articles used in metaanalysis in Korea

Whan Seok Choi, Sang Wook Song, Sun Myeong Ock, Chul Min Kim, Jungbok Lee, Woo Jin Chang, Se Hong Kim

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

22 Scopus citations

Abstract

With the increasing use of meta-analysis, duplicate publication of original research is particularly problematic. Duplicate publication can result in an inappropriate weighting of the study results. The purpose of our study was to assess the incidence and characteristics of duplicate publications in Korea, and to estimate the impact of duplicate publication on metaanalyses. The meta-analysis literature written by Korean authors was searched using the online search engines PubMed, KMbase, and KoreaMed. Duplication patterns were classified into the following 4 combinations: identical samples and identical outcomes (copy), identical samples and different outcomes (fragmentation), increased samples and identical outcomes (imalas), and decreased samples and identical outcomes (disaggregation). To estimate the multiple publication bias, we performed a meta-analysis with and without duplicated data. We estimated that 6 (6.9%) of the 86 analyzed meta-analyses included duplicate publications, and 6 of the 1,194 articles (0.5%) used in the meta-analyses were duplicate publications. In this study, duplicate publications were usually due to disaggregation and overlapping (imalas) publications. Of 6 duplicated articles, 1 was considered a copy (16.6%); 1, a fragmentation (16.6%); 2, imalas (33.3%); and 2, disaggregations (33.3%). There was an increase in the mean effect size and fail-safe number with duplicated data. Our study found only 6 instances of duplicate publication after analyzing 1,194 articles used in meta-analyses written by Korean authors. However, 6.9% of the meta-analyses included duplicate publications. Our findings suggest that meta-analyses should be interpreted cautiously, taking into account the possibility of duplicated studies.

Original languageEnglish
Article number182
JournalSpringerPlus
Volume3
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 2014

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
This research was supported by the Korea Research Foundation Grant funded by the Korean Government (KRF-I00030-C00008). We appreciate Kyung-Mi Nam (the Catholic University of Korea) for data collection.

Keywords

  • Bias
  • Duplicate Publication
  • Korea
  • Meta-analysis

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