Litcius/Paper detail

Completeness of reporting for COVID-19 case reports, January to April 2020: a meta-epidemiologic study

Michael A. Scaffidi, Nikko Gimpaya, Juana Li, Rishi Bansal, Yash Verma, Karam Elsolh, Gemma M. Donn, A Panjwani, Rishad Khan, Samir C. Grover

2021CMAJ Open15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The quality of case reports, which are often the first reported evidence for a disease, may be negatively affected by a rush to publication early in a pandemic. We aimed to determine the completeness of reporting (COR) for case reports published on coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). METHODS: We conducted a systematic search of the PubMed database for all single-patient case reports of confirmed COVID-19 published from Jan. 1 to Apr. 24, 2020. All included case reports were assessed for adherence to the CARE (Case Report) 31-item checklist, which was used to create a composite COR score. The primary outcome was the mean COR score assessed by 2 independent raters. Secondary outcomes included whether there was a change in overall COR score with certain publication factors (e.g., publication date) and whether there was a linear relation between COR and citation count and between COR scores and social media attention. RESULTS: Our search identified 196 studies that were published in 114 unique journals. We found that the overall mean COR score was 54.4%. No one case report included all of the 31 CARE checklist items. There was no significant correlation between COR with either citation count or social media attention. INTERPRETATION: We found that the overall COR for case reports on COVID-19 was poor. We suggest that journals adopt common case-reporting standards to improve reporting quality.

Topics & Concepts

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)PandemicCompleteness (order theory)2019-20 coronavirus outbreakMedicineSevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)CoronavirusMeta-analysisMEDLINEDiseaseInfectious disease (medical specialty)OutbreakVirologyPathologyPolitical scienceMathematicsLawMathematical analysisCOVID-19 and healthcare impactsSocial Media in Health EducationCOVID-19 Clinical Research Studies
Completeness of reporting for COVID-19 case reports, January to April 2020: a meta-epidemiologic study | Litcius