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Debunking Made Easy, AHCJ 2014
1. Know Your Limitations
Or, Debunking The Easy Way
Ivan Oransky, MD
Vice President, Global Editorial Director, MedPage Today
Co-Founder, Retraction Watch
@ivanoransky
AHCJ
Denver
March 27, 2014
3. Crotch Length and Fertility
“Somehow we feel that the ability to grab eyeballs by putting
"crotch length" in a headline dictated editorial judgment on this
story. Because it certainly fell short in delivering the goods that a
man would need in order to evaluate the potential of this finding.”
5. Crotch Length and Fertility
“Certain limitations warrant mention. As a referral center for male
infertility, it was not always possible to blind observers to the men's
diagnoses or fatherhood status which theoretically can lead to
observer bias. Although, the magnitude of observed differences in
AGD between fathers and infertile men (i.e. 40% in mean AGD and
45% in median AGD) suggests that any bias would be unlikely to
affect the overall conclusions. Moreover, the current method of AGD
measurement in adult men has not been studied, thus its accuracy
and reproducibility were difficult to assess other than the performed
comparison of measurements between investigators. . .
6. Crotch Length and Fertility
“Future studies are necessary to compare techniques for
measurement as well as other anatomic locations of the AGD
measurement. In addition, only men referred to and evaluated in our
clinic were eligible for enrollment; therefore, it is possible that our
patient population does not represent all infertile men. . .
7. Crotch Length and Fertility
“It is also important to note that the fertile controls were significantly
older than the infertile patients. While age was not associated with
AGD after accounting for fatherhood status and no evidence of
effect modification by age was found, it possible that AGD could
change with age. In addition, while all patients were measured in
the same position, some men were measured at the time of surgery
under general anesthesia while others were awake. It is
conceivable that anesthesia may affect measurements, although
stratifying by anesthesia status did not affect the conclusions.”
9. Fist Bump
“Numerous headlines tout that substituting a fist bump for a
handshake reduces transmission of infection. But is this just one of
many examples of the media sensationalizing the findings of a
paper far beyond what it is due?”
Guest Blogger: Skeptical Scalpel
11. Fist Bump
“This study was designed as a pilot to explore the potential harmful
effects of the handshake within the healthcare system, and as such it
has several limiting factors. The study is limited by our small sample
size and it could not assess statistical significance. Limited funding
curtailed our ability to identify specific strains of bacteria. A larger study
is planned to assess the level of significance between the handshake
and fist bump as well as to assess virulence of the cultured strains.
Furthermore, viral transmission is thought to be commonly transferred
by skin contact, but was not assessed in this study.”
15. Walnuts and Diabetes
“Our study has several potential limitations. First, our study
populations primarily consisted of white female nurses, which may
limit the generalizability of the findings to other ethnic groups or
males. Second, because diet was assessed by FFQs,
measurement error of nut intake is inevitable, which may
underestimate the true associations. Third, biochemical markers for
type 2 diabetes (fasting glucose, insulin, lipids, and HbA1C, etc.)
were not available in the full NHS cohorts, and thus could not be
adjusted in the models. . .
16. Walnuts and Diabetes
“Furthermore, habitual nut consumption was associated with
several healthy lifestyle practices and may be a marker for an
overall healthy lifestyle. Although we carefully controlled for a
number of diabetes risk factors, unmeasured and residual
confounding is still possible to explain the association and we could
not fully exclude the potential influence from the overall diet quality
and healthy cuisine effects.”
18. Morning Sickness and IQ
“Limitations of this study include its retrospective component,
potential for recall bias, and cohort selectivity limited to the
Motherisk database. Also, the use of different versions of the
assessment instrument and broad age range of the children may be
limiting factors.”
20. Studies: They’re There
“In a more detailed assessment of the medical literature, in which two
independent reviewers assessed the abstract and discussion sections
of 300 medical research papers, published in first and second tier
general medical and specialty journals, 73% of all papers were found
to acknowledge a median of 3 limitations.”
22. Press Releases: They’re Not There
Academic medical centers issue a mean of 49 press releases/year
Among 200 randomly selected releases
– 87 (44%) promoted animal or laboratory research, of which 64
(74%) explicitly claimed relevance to human health
– Among 95 releases about clinical research, 22 (23%) omitted
study size and 32 (34%) failed to quantify results
– 113 releases promoted human research
• 17% promoted randomized trials or meta-analyses
• 40% reported on uncontrolled interventions, small samples
(<30 participants), surrogate primary outcomes, or
unpublished data—yet 58% lacked the relevant cautions
Woloshin S et al. Press releases by academic
medical centers: not so academic? Ann Intern
Med 2009;150:613-618
24. Always Read the Study
Get the full study and read it –
“I think it’s journalistic malpractice to not have the full study in front of you
when you’re reporting,” Oransky says.
25. How to Get Studies
• www.EurekAlert.org for embargoed material
• AHCJ membership includes access to Cochrane
Library, Health Affairs, JAMA, and many other
journals www.healthjournalism.org
• ScienceDirect (Elsevier) gives reporters free access
to hundreds of journals www.sciencedirect.com
• Open access journals (e.g., Public Library of Science
www.plos.org)
• Ask press officers, or the authors
26. Ask “Dumb” Questions
If you lack experience dealing with scientific material, don’t be afraid to ask for
definitions of jargon and scientific terms. This is no time to pretend you
understand everything. Oransky says the science and medical industries are
full of jargon that mask important details. “You’ll get off the phone and have a
notebook full of gibberish and jargon,” he says. “You can’t be afraid of asking a
dumb question.”
27. Ask Smart Questions
• Was it:
– Peer-reviewed?
– Published? Where? Not all journals are
created equal.
“Dr. X said they published in Y rather than a
clinical journal because the paper was too
long for the word limits in the clinical
journals. I'm not sure where a detail like that
would go…but he was impressed with my
question.”
28. Ask Smart Questions
• Was it in humans?
– It’s remarkable there are any mice left with
cancer, depression, or restless leg syndrome
29. Ask Smart Questions
• Size matters
Look for the power calculation, and ask if you
don’t see one
31. Ask Smart Questions
• “Were those your primary endpoints?”
• “Looks as though that endpoint reached statistical
significance. Is that difference clinically
significant?”
32. Who Could Benefit?
• How many people have the disease?
• Keep potential disease-mongering in mind
34. Who Dropped Out?
• Why did they leave the trial?
• Intention to treat analysis
35. How Much Does it Cost?
• If it’s ready to be the subject of a story,
someone has projected the likely cost and
market.
– At least ask.
36. Who Has an Interest?
• Disclose conflicts
• PharmedOut.org
• Dollars For Docs series
http://projects.propublica.org/docdollars/
37. Are There Alternatives?
• Did the study compare the new treatment to
existing alternatives, or to placebo?
• What are the advantages and disadvantages
(and costs) of those existing alternatives?
• Consider alternative explanations. Remember
coffee and pancreatic cancer?
38. Don’t Rely Only on Study Authors
• Find outside sources. Here’s how:
40. Some Math: Alzheimer’s
“The best piece I saw was by John Gever, a dependable debunker
at MedPage Today, who led by saying the test's "accuracy fell
short of what would normally be acceptable for a screening test."
“That's a perspective I hadn't seen anywhere else. And Gever
reports that the test has a "positive predictive value" of 35%, which
means "nearly two-thirds of positive screening results would be
false." In other words, out of every 10 people who tested positive,
two-thirds of them--say, six or seven--would be told they will
develop Alzheimer's disease when that was not the case.
“If Gever's math is correct--I can't vouch for it, but he has a long
track record--then the test is nowhere close to being useful for
screening patients.”
42. Some Math: Alzheimer’s
“But they left out an important statistic for judging the usefulness of
such a test, as it would be applied in the clinic -- the positive
predictive value (PPV) or the accuracy of positive results seen in
the target population (in this case, cognitively healthy seniors).
“Contrary to what I later learned is popular belief, calculating a PPV
is easy, requiring nothing more than fourth grade arithmetic.
43. Some Math: Alzheimer’s
“So let's look at an assay with sensitivity and specificity rates of
90%, to be used in a population of 1,000 people in which 5% will
actually convert to cognitive impairment. We know that 50 of these
1,000 will convert and 950 will not. Of those 50 converters, 10% will
falsely test negative, and, of the 950 nonconverters, 10% will falsely
test positive.
“That means the testing program produces a total of 140 positive
results, 45 of which are correct and 95 false. The PPV is just the
fraction of total positives that are correct -- in this example, 45/140
or 32%.
44. Some Math: Alzheimer’s
“Even if the conversion rate to cognitive impairment in healthy
seniors is 10% instead of 5%, the PPV remains low. In 1,000
people, 100 will be true positives and 900 will be true negatives;
thus, with the same test sensitivity and specificity, there will be 180
positive results, split evenly between true and false, for a PPV of
50%.