[HTML][HTML] The study design elements employed by researchers in preclinical animal experiments from two research domains and implications for automation of …

AM O'Connor, SC Totton, JN Cullen, M Ramezani… - PloS one, 2018 - journals.plos.org
AM O'Connor, SC Totton, JN Cullen, M Ramezani, V Kalivarapu, C Yuan, SB Gilbert
PloS one, 2018journals.plos.org
Systematic reviews are increasingly using data from preclinical animal experiments in
evidence networks. Further, there are ever-increasing efforts to automate aspects of the
systematic review process. When assessing systematic bias and unit-of-analysis errors in
preclinical experiments, it is critical to understand the study design elements employed by
investigators. Such information can also inform prioritization of automation efforts that allow
the identification of the most common issues. The aim of this study was to identify the design …
Systematic reviews are increasingly using data from preclinical animal experiments in evidence networks. Further, there are ever-increasing efforts to automate aspects of the systematic review process. When assessing systematic bias and unit-of-analysis errors in preclinical experiments, it is critical to understand the study design elements employed by investigators. Such information can also inform prioritization of automation efforts that allow the identification of the most common issues. The aim of this study was to identify the design elements used by investigators in preclinical research in order to inform unique aspects of assessment of bias and error in preclinical research. Using 100 preclinical experiments each related to brain trauma and toxicology, we assessed design elements described by the investigators. We evaluated Methods and Materials sections of reports for descriptions of the following design elements: 1) use of comparison group, 2) unit of allocation of the interventions to study units, 3) arrangement of factors, 4) method of factor allocation to study units, 5) concealment of the factors during allocation and outcome assessment, 6) independence of study units, and 7) nature of factors. Many investigators reported using design elements that suggested the potential for unit-of-analysis errors, i.e., descriptions of repeated measurements of the outcome (94/200) and descriptions of potential for pseudo-replication (99/200). Use of complex factor arrangements was common, with 112 experiments using some form of factorial design (complete, incomplete or split-plot-like). In the toxicology dataset, 20 of the 100 experiments appeared to use a split-plot-like design, although no investigators used this term. The common use of repeated measures and factorial designs means understanding bias and error in preclinical experimental design might require greater expertise than simple parallel designs. Similarly, use of complex factor arrangements creates novel challenges for accurate automation of data extraction and bias and error assessment in preclinical experiments.
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