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J GlaucomaJune 20211 citations

Glaucoma Publication Trends in Leading General Ophthalmology Journals During the Past Quarter Century: Where Are the Clinical Trials?

Leshno Ari, De Moraes C Gustavo, Mezad-Koursh Daphna, Belkin Michael, Singer Reut, Jaber Wasim, Barkana Yaniv, Skaat Alon


AI Summary

Glaucoma publications increased in experimental journals but decreased for randomized clinical trials over 25 years, suggesting a shift from clinical validation to basic research, potentially due to funding changes.

Abstract

Prcis: During the past quarter century, the rate of glaucoma-related publication in general ophthalmology journals increased due to higher representation in "experimentally oriented" journals. The rate of glaucoma randomized controlled clinical trial (RCT) articles decreased during the same time period.

Purpose

To evaluate trends in rate of glaucoma publications in leading general ophthalmology journals over the past quarter century.

Materials and methods

Q1 ophthalmology journals Web sites were reviewed. Only journals not limited to certain subspecialty were considered "general" and included in the analysis. In addition we categorized journals orientation as either "clinical" or "experimental." The PubMed search engine was used to collect publications from the selected journals between January 1, 1995 to December 31, 2019. Publications captured by "glaucoma" or "ocular hypertension" filters were considered glaucoma related. The fraction of glaucoma articles out of total number of articles within each year for each journal was calculated. A linear mixed effects model was applied to detect trends in glaucoma publication rates during the study period.

Results

Eight journals were included: 4 "clinically oriented" and 4 "experimentally oriented." The PubMed search yielded 72,750 publications, of which 9329 (12.8%) considered "glaucoma related." Percentage of glaucoma publications remained stable within "clinically oriented" journals, and significantly increased within "experimentally oriented" journals (annual change of 0.3%, P<0.001). The number of glaucoma-related RCTs decreased significantly in each (annual change of -0.21% and -0.13%, respectively, P<0.05).

Conclusions

There has been a significant rise in the rates of glaucoma publications in "experimentally oriented" journals, while their representation in "clinically oriented" journals remained stable over the past quarter century. This change might be due to the increasing efforts to develop more advanced methods for evaluation and treatment in glaucoma, although still unable to address clinical demands. The decrease in glaucoma-related RCT articles might indicate reduced funding for such research.


MeSH Terms

BibliometricsGlaucomaHumansIntraocular PressureOphthalmologyPeriodicals as TopicRandomized Controlled Trials as Topic

Key Concepts5

The rate of glaucoma-related publications in general ophthalmology journals increased due to higher representation in "experimentally oriented" journals during the past quarter century.

EpidemiologyCohortRetrospective analysis of publicationsn=72,750 publications from 8 journals b…Ch10

The rate of glaucoma randomized controlled clinical trial (RCT) articles decreased during the past quarter century.

EpidemiologyCohortRetrospective analysis of publicationsn=72,750 publications from 8 journals b…Ch10

The percentage of glaucoma publications remained stable within "clinically oriented" journals between 1995 and 2019.

EpidemiologyCohortRetrospective analysis of publicationsn=72,750 publications from 8 journals (…Ch10

The percentage of glaucoma publications significantly increased within "experimentally oriented" journals with an annual change of 0.3% (P<0.001) between 1995 and 2019.

EpidemiologyCohortRetrospective analysis of publicationsn=72,750 publications from 8 journals (…Ch10

The number of glaucoma-related randomized controlled trials (RCTs) decreased significantly in both "clinically oriented" and "experimentally oriented" journals, with annual changes of -0.21% and -0.13% respectively (P<0.05), between 1995 and 2019.

EpidemiologyCohortRetrospective analysis of publicationsn=72,750 publications from 8 journals b…Ch10

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