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Reporting ethical approval in case reports and case series in 12 consecutive years: A systematic review

Our study describes the reported rate of the Institutional Review Board (IRB) approval, declaration of Helsinki (DoH), and informed consent in the case reports and case series and investigates factors associated with the ethical approval report. We searched PubMed for case reports and case series fr...

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Published in:Health Care Science 2024-10, Vol.3 (5), p.298-311
Main Authors: Tran, Linh, Thanh Huan, Vuong, Tai, Luu Lam Thang, Safi, Adnan, Ahmed, Moustafa ElBadry, Algazar, Mohamed Osman, Karimzadeh, Sedighe, Khang, Nguyen Vinh, Hai Nam, Nguyen, Qureshi, Zaheer Ahmad, Vuong, Nguyen Lam, Huu Nhat Minh, Le, Huy, Nguyen Tien
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container_end_page 311
container_issue 5
container_start_page 298
container_title Health Care Science
container_volume 3
creator Tran, Linh
Thanh Huan, Vuong
Tai, Luu Lam Thang
Safi, Adnan
Ahmed, Moustafa ElBadry
Algazar, Mohamed Osman
Karimzadeh, Sedighe
Khang, Nguyen Vinh
Hai Nam, Nguyen
Qureshi, Zaheer Ahmad
Vuong, Nguyen Lam
Huu Nhat Minh, Le
Huy, Nguyen Tien
description Our study describes the reported rate of the Institutional Review Board (IRB) approval, declaration of Helsinki (DoH), and informed consent in the case reports and case series and investigates factors associated with the ethical approval report. We searched PubMed for case reports and case series from 2006 to 2017. Annually, we obtained the first 20 articles of a case report cluster from 20 distinct publications. This analysis initially contained at least 2400 papers, with 100 papers each study design and year. Only 26 (5.4%) of 480 included studies reported IRB approval, DoH approval, and participant informed consent; 58 (12.1%) reported two out of three ethical statements (DoH, informed consent, IRB); and 151 (31.5%) reported only one, leading to nearly 245 studies (51.0%) did not report any ethical approval item. Both clusters mentioned the DoH the least. Only years, ages, ethical item types, and cluster types were associated with ethical reporting practices. This study found the serious under‐reporting of ethical practices in both case reports and case series. Ethical reporting practices in case reports and case series remained consistently suboptimal over a 12‐year period. Despite the importance of informed consent, institutional review board (IRB) approval, and adherence to the Helsinki Declaration, our analysis revealed low rates of reporting for these crucial elements (38.5%, 26.9% and 7.3% respectively). Furthermore, the disproportionate in informed consent reporting rate (52.3%) within IRB‐approved case series studies suggests potential misuse of IRB approval as a surrogate for obtaining patient consent.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/hcs2.113
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source Wiley Open Access; PubMed Central; ProQuest Publicly Available Content database
subjects case report
case series
declaration of Helsinki
ethical approval
informed consent
institutional review board
Review
title Reporting ethical approval in case reports and case series in 12 consecutive years: A systematic review
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