neurosurgical_literature

Neurosurgical literature

The findings demonstrate promising potential for the application of the ChatGPT in patient education. GPT4 is an accessible tool that can be an immediate solution to enhancing the readability of current neurosurgical literature. Layperson summaries generated by GPT4 would be a valuable addition to neurosurgical journals and would be likely to improve comprehension for patients using internet resources like PubMed 1).


Reporting quality within the neurosurgical literature is low, limiting the ability of journals to act as gatekeepers for evidence-based neurosurgical care. Journal policies during article submission aim to improve reporting quality. We conducted a metascience study characterizing the reporting policies of neurosurgical journals and other related peer-reviewed publications.

Journals were retrieved in 7 searches using Journal Citation Reports and Google Scholar. Characteristics, impact metrics, and submission policies were extracted.

Of 486 results, 54 journals were included, including 27 neurosurgical and 27 related topical journals. Thirty-eight (70.4%) adopted authorship guidelines and 20 (37.0%) disclosure standards of the International Council of Medical Journal Editors. Twenty-six (48.1%) required data availability statement and 33 (61.1%) clinical trials registration. Twenty-one (38.9%) required and 11 (20.4%) recommended adherence to reporting guidelines. Twenty (37.0%) endorsed EQUATOR network guidelines. PRISMA was mentioned by 30 (55.6%) journals, CONSORT by 28 (51.9%), and STROBE by 18 (33.3%). Among neurosurgical journals, factors associated with a requirement or recommendation to follow reporting guidelines among neurosurgical journals included impact factor (P = 0.0013), Article Influence Score (P = 0.0236), SCImago h-index (P = 0.0152), SCImago journal rank (P = 0.002), and CiteScore (P = 0.0023), as well as recommendations pertaining to International Council of Medical Journal Editors authorship guidelines (P = 0.0085), ORCID (P = 0.014), clinical trials registration (P = 0.0369), or data availability statement (P = 0.0047). CONSORT, PRISMA, or STROBE delineations were significantly associated with the mention of another guideline (P < 0.01).

Neurosurgical journal submission policies are inconsistent. Frameworks to improve reporting quality are uncommonly used. Increasing rigor and standardization of reporting policies across journals publishers may improve quality 2).


1)
Guerra GA, Grove S, Le J, Hofmann HL, Shah I, Bhagavatula S, Fixman B, Gomez D, Hopkins B, Dallas J, Cacciamani G, Peterson R, Zada G. Artificial intelligence as a modality to enhance the readability of neurosurgical literature for patients. J Neurosurg. 2024 Nov 8:1-7. doi: 10.3171/2024.6.JNS24617. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 39504543.
2)
Shlobin NA, Wang A, Graffeo CS, Moher D. Reporting Policies in Neurosurgical Journals: A Meta-Science Study of the Current State and Case for Standardization. World Neurosurg. 2021 Oct 27;158:11-23. doi: 10.1016/j.wneu.2021.10.143. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 34715370.
  • neurosurgical_literature.txt
  • Last modified: 2024/11/09 06:57
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