"Academic Influence and Industry Funding in Nerve Allograft Research: A Co-Authorship Network Analysis"

Clinical use of acellular nerve allografts is rapidly increasing despite limited high-quality, comparative evidence of superiority. Simultaneously, non-research payments to clinicians by the nerve allograft industry exceeds $14,000,000 over the last decade. In this study, the authors hypothesized th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Plastic and reconstructive surgery (1963) 2024-09
Hauptverfasser: Reese, McKay, Mehta, Yash A, Haupt, Michael R, Dennis, Daniella, Becker, Miriam, Clark, Robert Craig, Reid, Chris M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Clinical use of acellular nerve allografts is rapidly increasing despite limited high-quality, comparative evidence of superiority. Simultaneously, non-research payments to clinicians by the nerve allograft industry exceeds $14,000,000 over the last decade. In this study, the authors hypothesized that nerve allograft-related academic influence would correlate with industry funding. PubMed studies on nerve allografts in plastic and reconstructive surgery journals were reviewed. Using author lists from extracted studies, a co-authorship network was generated and degree centralities - quantitative measurements of influence within a network - were calculated. Open Payments data from the nerve allograft industry was summated for each author. Finally, Pearson correlation and linear regression were used to analyze the relationship between centrality and payments received. 185 studies were included, with 581 unique authors (nodes) and 2,406 co-authorships (ties) between them. Among authors with exceptional network influence (centrality >10, 75th percentile; n=113), 56 were clinicians with valid NPIs and therefore eligible for inclusion in the Open Payments database. 44 (79%) of these authors received at least one payment from the industry. Pearson correlation revealed a moderate (0.4
ISSN:0032-1052
1529-4242
1529-4242
DOI:10.1097/PRS.0000000000011759