| Literature DB >> 35125557 |
Ivan Kodvanj1, Jan Homolak1, Davor Virag1, Vladimir Trkulja1.
Abstract
COVID-19-related (vs. non-related) articles appear to be more expeditiously processed and published in peer-reviewed journals. We aimed to evaluate: (i) whether COVID-19-related preprints were favored for publication, (ii) preprinting trends and public discussion of the preprints, and (iii) the relationship between the publication topic (COVID-19-related or not) and quality issues. Manuscripts deposited at bioRxiv and medRxiv between January 1 and September 27 2020 were assessed for the probability of publishing in peer-reviewed journals, and those published were evaluated for submission-to-acceptance time. The extent of public discussion was assessed based on Altmetric and Disqus data. The Retraction Watch Database and PubMed were used to explore the retraction of COVID-19 and non-COVID-19 articles and preprints. With adjustment for the preprinting server and number of deposited versions, COVID-19-related preprints were more likely to be published within 120 days since the deposition of the first version (OR = 1.96, 95% CI: 1.80-2.14) as well as over the entire observed period (OR = 1.39, 95% CI: 1.31-1.48). Submission-to-acceptance was by 35.85 days (95% CI: 32.25-39.45) shorter for COVID-19 articles. Public discussion of preprints was modest and COVID-19 articles were overrepresented in the pool of retracted articles in 2020. Current data suggest a preference for publication of COVID-19-related preprints over the observed period. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s11192-021-04249-7. © Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest, Hungary 2021.Entities:
Keywords: COVID19; Peer-review; Preprint; Publishing
Year: 2022 PMID: 35125557 PMCID: PMC8801281 DOI: 10.1007/s11192-021-04249-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scientometrics ISSN: 0138-9130 Impact factor: 3.801
Fig. 1Outline of datasets used in the present analysis and their purpose. Outcomes used to achieve the primary study objective are shaded
The number of retractions/expressions of concern/corrections identified at Retraction Watch Database (RWD), the total number of PubMed articles, and retraction rates (notices/total number of articles) for COVID-19-related articles and articles related to four other viruses/associated diseases, and two research fields (epidemiology, immunology)
| Topic | RWD counta | Pubmed countb | Retraction rate (‰) |
|---|---|---|---|
| COVID-19 | 36 | 64,915 | 0.55 |
| Not COVID-19 | 306 | 1,428,252 | 0.21 |
| HIV | 1 | 10,453 | 0.10 |
| Herpes virus | 3 | 2663 | 1.13 |
| Influenza | 0 | 3411 | – |
| Hepatitis virus | 0 | 1321 | – |
| Epidemiology | 6 | 40,279 | 0.15 |
| Immunology | 8 | 63,577 | 0.13 |
aSearch phrases used for searching RWD: COVID-19 OR SARS-CoV-2 OR Coronavirus disease 19 OR 2019-nCoV; HIV OR AIDS OR human immunodeficiency virus; Herpes OR Herpes simplex OR HSV1 OR HSV2 OR varicella-zoster OR HZV OR Cytomegalovirus OR CMV OR Epstein-Barr OR EBV; Influenza OR Influenzavirus OR flu OR *influenza* OR H1N1 OR H5N1; Hepatitis virus OR HepA OR HepB OR HepC OR HepD OR HepE OR HAV OR HBV OR HCV OR HDV OR HEV OR Viral hepatitis; epidemiol* OR infect* OR virology OR virus OR viral; immun* OR inflamma* OR cytokine* OR leukocy* OR neutroph* OR lymphoc* OR antigen* OR antibod*. Search was limited to articles published from January 01, 2020 till December 05, 2020, with notice published during the same period. All preprints were omitted and all COVID-19 articles were excluded where the topic was not related to COVID-19
bSame search phrases were used in conjunction with “AND ("2020/01/01"[Date—Publication]: "2020/12/05"[Date—Publication]) NOT (COVID-19 OR SARS-CoV-2 OR "Coronavirus disease 19" OR nCoV-19) NOT Preprint[Publication Type]”, and with “[title]” added next to each term
Fig. 2Structure of preprints deposited by June 29 and by September 27, 2020, used to evaluate the probability of publishing by platform-by topic-by publishing outcome. Shading marks the primary outcome related to the 1st study objective
Summary of the analysis of the probability of publishing within 120 days since the first preprint version (a subset of preprints deposited till June 29) and time-to-publishing considering the entire observed period (a subset of preprints deposited till September 27)
| Predictors | Published within 120 days | Published before November 01 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | |||
| COVID-19 vs Not COVID-19 | 1.96 (1.80–2.14) | < 0.001 | 1.39 (1.31–1.48) | < 0.001 |
| bioRxiv vs medRxiv | 1.32 (1.21–1.44) | < 0.001 | 1.24 (1.17–1.32) | < 0.001 |
| ≥ 2 vs 1 version | 0.72 (0.67–0.78) | < 0.001 | 0.90 (0.85–0.94) | < 0.001 |
Effects are expressed as odds ratios (OR). Stratified (by preprinting date of the first version) logistic regression was fitted to the probability of being published within 120 days and over the entire observed period
Analysis of submission-to-acceptance time for published preprints (in days)
| Predictors | Estimates (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|
| COVID-19 vs Not COVID-19 | − 35.85 (− 39.45 to − 32.25) | < 0.001 |
| bioRxiv vs medRxiv | 1.04 (− 2.58 to 4.67) | 0.573 |
| ≥ 2 vs 1 preprint version | 0.48 (− 2.48 to 3.44) | 0.750 |
Linear mixed-effects model (submission date specified as a random effect) was fitted to the number of days between the date of receipt by the journal and date of acceptance. Submission to publication time was identified for 533 COVID-19/bioRxiv (median = 53 days), 4079 not-COVID-19/bioRxiv (median = 95 days), 1107 COVID-19/medRxiv (median = 49 days) and for 348 not-COVID-19/medRxiv preprints (median = 104 days)
Fig. 3Posting of preprints and bioRxiv server usage statistics. A The number of new preprints posted on bioRxiv and medRxiv over the observed period. B Monthly abstract views, full-text views, and PDF downloads on bioRxiv server (not available for medRxiv)
Fig. 4Disqus comments and Altmetric data for the identified preprints. A Percentage of preprints that received comments on bioRxiv or medRxiv website. B Distribution of comments number for preprints with comments. C Overall Altmetric score for all preprints on bioRxiv and medRxiv, with the first version released in 2020. D Percentage of preprints mentioned at various sources. E Counts of mentions by Facebook users, blog posts, news outlets, and Twitter. All data was retrieved on December 05–06, 2020