Funding Bias in Shoulder Arthroplasty Research

J Shoulder Elbow Surg. 2024 Apr 18:S1058-2746(24)00264-7. doi: 10.1016/j.jse.2024.03.016. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Background: Prior research has shown that industry funding can impact the outcomes reported in medical literature. Limited data exists on the degree of bias that industry funding may have on shoulder arthroplasty literature outside of the Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery. The purpose of this study is to characterize the type and frequency of funding for recently published shoulder arthroplasty studies and the impact of industry funding on reported outcomes. We hypothesized that studies with industry funding are more likely to report positive outcomes than those without.

Materials/method: We performed a retrospective study searching all articles with the term "shoulder arthroplasty," "reverse shoulder arthroplasty," "anatomic total shoulder arthroplasty," or "total shoulder arthroplasty" on PubMed from the years January 2020 to December 2022. The primary outcome of studies was coded as either positive, negative, or neutral. A positive result was defined as one in which the null hypothesis was rejected. A negative result was defined as one in which the result did not favor the group in which the industry-funded implant was used. A neutral result was defined as one in which the null hypothesis was confirmed. Article funding type, subcategorized as National Institute of Health (NIH) funding or industry funding was recorded. Author disclosures were recorded to determine conflicts of interest. Statistical analysis was conducted using the Chi-squared test and Fisher exact test.

Results: 750 articles reported on either conflict of interest or funding source and were included in the study. Of the total number of industry funded studies the majority were found to have a positive primary endpoint (58.1%, 104/179), as compared to a negative (7.8%, 14/179), or neutral endpoint (33.5%, 60/179) (p=0.004). 363 articles reported an author conflicts of interest and the majority of these studies had positive primary endpoint (55.6%, 202/363) as compared to negative (9.1%, 33/363) or neutral endpoints (34.4%, 125/363)(p=.002).

Conclusion: The results of this study suggest that there is a significant relationship between conflicts of interest and the primary outcome of shoulder arthroplasty studies, beyond the overall positive publication bias. Studies with industry funding and author conflicts of interest both report positive outcomes more frequently than negative outcomes. Shoulder surgeons should be aware of this potential bias when choosing to base clinical practice on published data.

Keywords: Funding Bias; Level of Evidence; Literature; Publication Bias; Research Bias; Reverse Shoulder Arthroplasty; Shoulder Arthroplasty; Survey Study; Total Shoulder Arthroplasty.

Publication types

  • Review