Discrepancies Between Plastic Surgery Meeting Abstracts and Subsequent Full-Length Manuscript Publications.

Rafael Denadai, Gustavo Henrique Araujo, Andre Silveira Pinho, Rodrigo Denadai, Hugo Samartine, Cassio Eduardo Raposo-Amaral
Author Information
  1. Rafael Denadai: Institute of Plastic and Craniofacial Surgery, SOBRAPAR Hospital, Av. Adolpho Lutz, 100, Caixa Postal 6028, Campinas, São Paulo, CEP 13084-880, Brazil. denadai.rafael@hotmail.com. ORCID
  2. Gustavo Henrique Araujo: Institute of Plastic and Craniofacial Surgery, SOBRAPAR Hospital, Av. Adolpho Lutz, 100, Caixa Postal 6028, Campinas, São Paulo, CEP 13084-880, Brazil.
  3. Andre Silveira Pinho: Institute of Plastic and Craniofacial Surgery, SOBRAPAR Hospital, Av. Adolpho Lutz, 100, Caixa Postal 6028, Campinas, São Paulo, CEP 13084-880, Brazil.
  4. Rodrigo Denadai: Institute of Plastic and Craniofacial Surgery, SOBRAPAR Hospital, Av. Adolpho Lutz, 100, Caixa Postal 6028, Campinas, São Paulo, CEP 13084-880, Brazil.
  5. Hugo Samartine: Institute of Plastic and Craniofacial Surgery, SOBRAPAR Hospital, Av. Adolpho Lutz, 100, Caixa Postal 6028, Campinas, São Paulo, CEP 13084-880, Brazil.
  6. Cassio Eduardo Raposo-Amaral: Institute of Plastic and Craniofacial Surgery, SOBRAPAR Hospital, Av. Adolpho Lutz, 100, Caixa Postal 6028, Campinas, São Paulo, CEP 13084-880, Brazil.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The purpose of this bibliometric study was to assess the discrepancies between plastic surgery meeting abstracts and subsequent full-length manuscript publications.
METHODS: Abstracts presented at the Brazilian Congress of Plastic Surgery from 2010 to 2011 were compared with matching manuscript publications. Discrepancies between the abstract and the subsequent manuscript were categorized as major (changes in the purpose, methods, study design, sample size, statistical analysis, results, and conclusions) and minor (changes in the title and authorship) variations.
RESULTS: The overall discrepancy rate was 96 %, with at least one major (76 %) and/or minor (96 %) variation. There were inconsistencies between the study title (56 %), authorship (92 %), purpose (6 %), methods (20 %), study design (36 %), sample size (51.2 %), statistical analysis (14 %), results (20 %), and conclusions (8 %) of manuscripts compared with their corresponding meeting abstracts.
CONCLUSION: As changes occur before manuscript publication of plastic surgery meeting abstracts, caution should be exercised in referencing abstracts or altering surgical practices based on abstracts' content.
LEVEL OF EVIDENCE V: This journal requires that authors assign a level of evidence to each article. For a full description of these Evidence-Based Medicine ratings, please refer to the Table of Contents or the online Instructions to Authors www.springer.com/00266 .

Keywords

MeSH Term

Bibliometrics
Brazil
Confidence Intervals
Congresses as Topic
Humans
Manuscripts as Topic
Observer Variation
Publications
Quality Control
Surgery, Plastic

Word Cloud

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