Reducing the residue of retractions in evidence synthesis: ways to minimise inappropriate citation and use of retracted data
- PMID: 37463764
- PMCID: PMC10982619
- DOI: 10.1136/bmjebm-2022-111921
Reducing the residue of retractions in evidence synthesis: ways to minimise inappropriate citation and use of retracted data
Abstract
The incorporation of publications that have been retracted is a risk in reliable evidence synthesis. Retraction is an important mechanism for correcting the literature and protecting its integrity. Within the medical literature, the continued citation of retracted publications occurs for a variety of reasons. Recent evidence suggests that systematic reviews and meta-analyses often unwittingly cite retracted publications which, at least in some cases, may significantly impact quantitative effect estimates in meta-analyses. There is strong evidence that authors of systematic reviews and meta-analyses may be unaware of the retracted status of publications and treat them as if they are not retracted. These problems are difficult to address for several reasons: identifying retracted publications is important but logistically challenging; publications may be retracted while a review is in preparation or in press and problems with a publication may also be discovered after the evidence synthesis is published. We propose a set of concrete actions that stakeholders (eg, scientists, peer-reviewers, journal editors) might take in the near-term, and that research funders, citation management systems, and databases and search engines might take in the longer term to limit the impact of retracted primary studies on evidence syntheses.
Keywords: Evidence-Based Practice; Information Storage and Retrieval; Publishing; Retraction of Publication as Topic; Systematic Reviews as Topic.
© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.
Conflict of interest statement
Competing interests: CB declares: I am a subject matter expert for the American Gastroenterological Association. Non-financial associations with the National Information Standards Organization, Cochrane Urology and the Center for Scientific Integrity (parent organisation of Retraction Watch). SB declares: I am Research Integrity Editor at Cochrane. The opinions expressed in this article are mine and not the views of Cochrane. CMF Jr has no funding or conflicts of interest to report. DF has no funding or conflicts of interest to report. KK has received travel support from Crossref and the National Information Standards Organization. Jodi Schneider declares non-financial associations with Crossref; COPE; International Association of Scientific, Technical and Medical Publishers; the National Information Standards Organization; and the Center for Scientific Integrity (parent organisation of Retraction Watch). The National Information Standards Organization is a subawardee on her Alfred P. Sloan Foundation grant G-2022-19409.
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