| Literature DB >> 30723071 |
Wendy Rogers1,2, Matthew P Robertson3, Angela Ballantyne4, Brette Blakely5, Ruby Catsanos6, Robyn Clay-Williams5, Maria Fiatarone Singh7.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The objective of this study is to investigate whether papers reporting research on Chinese transplant recipients comply with international professional standards aimed at excluding publication of research that: (1) involves any biological material from executed prisoners; (2) lacks Institutional Review Board (IRB) approval and (3) lacks consent of donors.Entities:
Keywords: china; executed prisoners; organ donation; publication ethics; scoping review
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30723071 PMCID: PMC6377532 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-024473
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Arksey and O’Mallee’s methodological framework for a scoping review
| Framework stage | Description |
| 1 | Identifying the research question |
| 2 | Identifying relevant studies |
| 3 | Study selection |
| 4 | Charting the data |
| 5 | Collating, summarising and reporting the results |
Figure 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses flow chart detailing search strategy.
Reasons for exclusions of full-text papers (n=1229)
| Reason | Number |
| Animal research | 12 |
| Chinese journal | 96 |
| Case report | 3 |
| Incidental inclusion | 14 |
| Kidneys | 637 |
| Living donors | 7 |
| Not China | 380 |
| Not reviewed | 1 |
| Other organs | 2 |
| Other | 49 |
| Review paper | 28 |
Results summary table
| Variable | Number (%) |
| Total number of included papers | 445 (100) |
| Total number of transplants reported | 85 477 |
| Median number of transplants per paper (range) | 72 (1–20524) |
| Number of papers that explicitly stated organs (hearts, livers, lungs) were from deceased sources | 173 (39) |
| Number of papers reporting research ethics approval | 324 (73) |
| Number of papers with any information on the identity of the sources of organs | 63 (14) |
| Number of papers with explicit statement that no organs from prisoners were used | 33 (7) |
| Number of papers that reported consent for donation | 6 (1) |
| Number of papers with any statement about the diagnosis of death in sources (after brain death, after cardiac death) | 64 (14) |
Figure 2Articles per year with and without ethics statements.
Figure 3Articles per year with and without organ source ID.
Numbers of volunteer organ donors in China 2000–2014
| Year | Number of volunteer donations according to Chinese sources |
| Up to 2009 | 120 |
| 2010 | 34 |
| 2011 | 132 |
| 2012 | 433 |
| 2013 | 849 |
| 2014 | 1702 |
Numbers of papers, including those with organ source identity statements by years and numbers of transplants
| No date of transplants in papers | All transplants prior to 2010* | Transplants before and after 2010 when volunteer pilot started | All transplants took place during pilot 2010–2014 | Transplants occurred before and after 2014 | All transplants occurred post-2014 | |
| Total included papers | 61 | 192 | 148 | 38 | 6 | 0 |
| Total number of transplants | 2959 | 28 442 | 49 376 | 3937 | 763 | 0 |
| 33 papers claiming no executed prisoners | 19 (2688) | 8 (1212) | 6 (1556) | 0 | 0 | |
| 14 papers claiming volunteers | 1 (321) | 8 (2269) | 4 (387) | 1 (12) | 0 | 0 |
| 6 papers claiming donors gave consent (no. of transplants) | 1 (40) | 3 (200) | 2 (1197) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| 10 papers with statement about donors implying voluntariness or consent (no. of transplants) | 2 (11) | 0 | 4 (619) | 4 (153) | 0 | 0 |
*In one paper,37 the dates of the transplants were not recorded, but the paper, published in 2010, reported on research subjects whose grafts had been stable for at least 2 years, indicating transplant prior to 2010.
List of journals publishing five or more papers, and numbers of those papers in which there were ethics and/or organ source identity statements
| Journal | CiteScore* | Total papers in journal out of 445 (%) | Number of papers with ethics statement (%) | Number of papers with donor ID (%) |
|
| 0.98 | 65 (15%) | 25 (38%) | 12 (18%) |
|
| 3.11 | 20 (4%) | 19 (95%) | 5 (25%) |
|
| 1.67 | 16 (4%) | 9 (56%) | 3 (19%) |
|
| 2.50 | 15 (3%) | 12 (80%) | 3 (20%) |
|
| 0.98 | 14 (3%) | 11 (79%) | 2 (14%) |
|
| 0.54 | 11 (2%) | 10 (91%) | 1 (9%) |
|
| 1.61 | 8 (2%) | 7 (88%) | 1 (13%) |
|
| 1.17 | 8 (2%) | 5 (63%) | 1 (13%) |
|
| 1.29 | 7 (2%) | 4 (57%) | 0 (0%) |
|
| 1.91 | 6 (1%) | 5 (83%) | 0 (0%) |
|
| 3.32 | 6 (1%) | 5 (83%) | 1 (17%) |
|
| 2.71 | 6 (1%) | 5 (83%) | 1 (17%) |
|
| 1.88 | 5 (1%) | 5 (100%) | 1 (20%) |
|
| 1.42 | 5 (1%) | 5 (100%) | 1 (20%) |
|
| 1.91 | 5 (1%) | 5 (100%) | 0 (0%) |
|
| 1.63 | 5 (1%) | 5 (100%) | 1 (20%) |
|
| 2.77 | 5 (1%) | 5 (100%) | 2 (40%) |
*Average citations received per document published in the journal (source: Scopus).