Results publications are inadequately linked to trial registrations: An automated pipeline and evaluation of German university medical centers
Published 2022 View Full Article
- Home
- Publications
- Publication Search
- Publication Details
Title
Results publications are inadequately linked to trial registrations: An automated pipeline and evaluation of German university medical centers
Authors
Keywords
-
Journal
Clinical Trials
Volume -, Issue -, Pages 174077452210874
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Online
2022-04-01
DOI
10.1177/17407745221087456
References
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.- A comparative analysis of important public clinical trial registries, and a proposal for an interim ideal one
- (2021) Nisha Venugopal et al. PLoS One
- Results dissemination from completed clinical trials conducted at German university medical centers remained delayed and incomplete. The 2014 –2017 cohort
- (2021) Nico Riedel et al. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Legal regulations, ethical guidelines and recent policies to increase transparency of clinical trials
- (2020) Jan Borysowski et al. BRITISH JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY
- Prospective registration and reporting of trial number in randomised clinical trials: global cross sectional study of the adoption of ICMJE and Declaration of Helsinki recommendations
- (2020) Mustafa Al-Durra et al. BMJ-British Medical Journal
- Obstacles to the reuse of study metadata in ClinicalTrials.gov
- (2020) Laura Miron et al. Scientific Data
- Registration audit of clinical trials given a favourable opinion by UK research ethics committees
- (2019) Carla Denneny et al. BMJ Open
- Result dissemination from clinical trials conducted at German university medical centers was delayed and incomplete
- (2019) Susanne Wieschowski et al. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Registration of published randomized trials: a systematic review and meta-analysis
- (2018) Ludovic Trinquart et al. BMC Medicine
- Adherence to the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors’ (ICMJE) prospective registration policy and implications for outcome integrity: a cross-sectional analysis of trials published in high-impact specialty society journals
- (2018) Anand D. Gopal et al. Trials
- Publication and reporting of clinical trial results: cross sectional analysis across academic medical centers
- (2016) Ruijun Chen et al. BMJ-British Medical Journal
- Publication and reporting of clinical trial results: cross sectional analysis across academic medical centers
- (2016) Ruijun Chen et al. BMJ-British Medical Journal
- Increasing value and reducing waste: addressing inaccessible research
- (2014) An-Wen Chan et al. LANCET
- Linked publications from a single trial: a thread of evidence
- (2014) Douglas G Altman et al. Trials
- Evaluating adherence to the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors' policy of mandatory, timely clinical trial registration
- (2013) Vojtech Huser et al. JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL INFORMATICS ASSOCIATION
- Systematic Review of the Empirical Evidence of Study Publication Bias and Outcome Reporting Bias — An Updated Review
- (2013) Kerry Dwan et al. PLoS One
- Linking ClinicalTrials.gov and PubMed to Track Results of Interventional Human Clinical Trials
- (2013) Vojtech Huser et al. PLoS One
- All trials must be registered and the results published
- (2013) I. Chalmers et al. BMJ-British Medical Journal
- Trial Registration Numbers Are Underreported in Biomedical Publications
- (2012) Fleur T. van de Wetering et al. PLoS One
- Compliance of clinical trial registries with the World Health Organization minimum data set: a survey
- (2009) Lorenzo P Moja et al. Trials
- CONSORT for reporting randomised trials in journal and conference abstracts
- (2008) Sally Hopewell et al. LANCET
- CONSORT for Reporting Randomized Controlled Trials in Journal and Conference Abstracts: Explanation and Elaboration
- (2008) Sally Hopewell et al. PLOS MEDICINE
Publish scientific posters with Peeref
Peeref publishes scientific posters from all research disciplines. Our Diamond Open Access policy means free access to content and no publication fees for authors.
Learn MoreAsk a Question. Answer a Question.
Quickly pose questions to the entire community. Debate answers and get clarity on the most important issues facing researchers.
Get Started