Background A cointervention in a randomized clinical trial (RCT) is medical care given in addition to the tested intervention. If cointerventions are unbalanced between trial arms, the results may be biased. We hypothesized that cointerventions would be more adequately reported in RCTs without full blinding or at risk of bias. Methods and Results To describe the reporting of cointerventions and to evaluate the factors associated with their reporting, we did a systematic search of all RCTs evaluating pharmacological interventions on cardiovascular outcomes published in 5 high-impact journals. The reporting of cointerventions, blinding, and risk of bias were extracted and evaluated independently by 2 reviewers (E.M., L.A.). Cointerventions we...
This paper tackles several statistical controversies that are commonly faced when reporting a major ...
Background: Loss to follow‐up (LTFU) is common in randomized controlled trials. However, its potent...
Overwhelming evidence shows the quality of reporting of randomised controlled trials (RCTs) is not o...
BACKGROUND: A cointervention in a randomized clinical trial (RCT) is medical care given in addition ...
Background A cointervention in a randomized clinical trial (RCT) is medical care given in addition t...
ObjectiveTo assess how inadequate reporting of cointerventions influences estimated treatment effect...
Importance: Changes in evidence-based practice and guideline recommendations depend on high-quality ...
Randomized clinical trials (RCTs) are considered the gold standard for evidence-based medicine. Howe...
Background—Prior work indicates that therapeutic trials funded by for-profit organizations are more ...
BACKGROUND: Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) represent the gold standard methodological design to...
Objectives: To provide information on the frequency and reasons for outcome reporting bias in clinic...
Overwhelming evidence now indicates that the quality of reporting of randomized, controlled trials (...
BackgroundRandomised controlled trials (RCTs) are subject to bias if they lack methodological qualit...
OBJECTIVES: To provide information on the frequency and reasons for outcome reporting bias in clinic...
Abstract Background Discrepancies between pre-specified and reported outcomes are an important sourc...
This paper tackles several statistical controversies that are commonly faced when reporting a major ...
Background: Loss to follow‐up (LTFU) is common in randomized controlled trials. However, its potent...
Overwhelming evidence shows the quality of reporting of randomised controlled trials (RCTs) is not o...
BACKGROUND: A cointervention in a randomized clinical trial (RCT) is medical care given in addition ...
Background A cointervention in a randomized clinical trial (RCT) is medical care given in addition t...
ObjectiveTo assess how inadequate reporting of cointerventions influences estimated treatment effect...
Importance: Changes in evidence-based practice and guideline recommendations depend on high-quality ...
Randomized clinical trials (RCTs) are considered the gold standard for evidence-based medicine. Howe...
Background—Prior work indicates that therapeutic trials funded by for-profit organizations are more ...
BACKGROUND: Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) represent the gold standard methodological design to...
Objectives: To provide information on the frequency and reasons for outcome reporting bias in clinic...
Overwhelming evidence now indicates that the quality of reporting of randomized, controlled trials (...
BackgroundRandomised controlled trials (RCTs) are subject to bias if they lack methodological qualit...
OBJECTIVES: To provide information on the frequency and reasons for outcome reporting bias in clinic...
Abstract Background Discrepancies between pre-specified and reported outcomes are an important sourc...
This paper tackles several statistical controversies that are commonly faced when reporting a major ...
Background: Loss to follow‐up (LTFU) is common in randomized controlled trials. However, its potent...
Overwhelming evidence shows the quality of reporting of randomised controlled trials (RCTs) is not o...