NEgatiVE results in Radiomics research (NEVER): A meta-research study of publication bias in leading radiology journals

•Based on a priori power analysis, a random sample of 149 publications was reviewed.•Nearly half of the publications did not compare their radiomic method to a non-radiomic method.•Leading clinical radiology journals have a strong bias toward publishing positive results.•Almost never do these journa...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of radiology 2023-06, Vol.163, p.110830-110830, Article 110830
Hauptverfasser: Kocak, Burak, Bulut, Elif, Bayrak, Osman Nuri, Okumus, Ahmet Arda, Altun, Omer, Borekci Arvas, Zeynep, Kavukoglu, Irem
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Based on a priori power analysis, a random sample of 149 publications was reviewed.•Nearly half of the publications did not compare their radiomic method to a non-radiomic method.•Leading clinical radiology journals have a strong bias toward publishing positive results.•Almost never do these journals publish negative results. The purpose of this study was to conduct a meta-research of radiomics-related articles for the publication of negative results, with a focus on the leading clinical radiology journals due to their purportedly high editorial standards. A literature search was performed in PubMed to identify original research studies on radiomics (last search date: August 16th, 2022). The search was restricted to studies published in Q1 clinical radiology journals indexed by Scopus and Web of Science. Following an a priori power analysis based on our null hypothesis, a random sampling of the published literature was conducted. Besides the six baseline study characteristics, a total of three items about publication bias were evaluated. Agreement between raters was analyzed. Disagreements were resolved through consensus. Statistical synthesis of the qualitative evaluations was presented. Following a priori power analysis, we included a random sample of 149 publications in this study. Most of the publications were retrospective (95%; 142/149), based on private data (91%; 136/149), centered on a single institution (75%; 111/149), and lacked external validation (81%; 121/149). Slightly fewer than half (44%; 66/149) made no comparison to non-radiomic approaches. Overall, only one study (1%; 1/149) reported negative results for radiomics, yielding a statistically significant binomial test (p 
ISSN:0720-048X
1872-7727
DOI:10.1016/j.ejrad.2023.110830