Association of Author Gender With Sex Bias in Surgical Research

Importance Previous studies demonstrate sex bias in surgical research. Female participants and investigators are underrepresented in surgical scientific research. Objectives To describe the distribution of male and female authors in 5 general-interest surgery journals, assess the association of author gender with sex bias, and explore whether investigators benefit from performing sex-inclusion research. Design, Setting, and Participants For this bibliometric analysis, data were abstracted from 1921 original, peer-reviewed articles published from January 1, 2011, through December 31, 2012, in Annals of Surgery, American Journal of Surgery, JAMA Surgery, The Journal of Surgical Research, and Surgery. Excluded articles pertained to a sex-specific disease or did not report the number of study participants. An additional 119 articles contained gender-ambiguous author names and were omitted. Data were analyzed from April to June 2017. Main Outcomes and Measures Male and female first and senior authors, number of female and male participants in each study, surgical specialty, and number of citations received per article. Results Of the 3604 authors of 1802 articles included in this study, 2791 first and senior authors (77.4%) were male and 813 (22.6%) were female. The prevalence of male and female authors was consistent across all 5 journals and among clinical and basic science research. Articles by female authors included a higher median number of female study participants compared with their male counterparts (27.5 vs 16.0; P = .01), but sex matched the inclusion of participants less frequently (36% vs 45%; P = .001). No sex-based differences occurred between male and female authors in reporting, statistical analysis, and discussion of the data or in the number of citations received. Compared with studies that did not report, analyze, or discuss data by sex, studies that performed sex-specific data reporting yielded a mean of 2.8 more citations (95% CI, 1.2-4.4; P = .001); those that performed statistical analysis, a mean of 3.5 more citations (95% CI, 1.8-5.1; P = .001); and those that discussed the data, a mean of 2.6 more citations (95% CI, 0.7-4.5; P = .001). Articles with a higher percentage of sex matching of participants also received more citations, with an increase of 1 citation per 4.8% (95% CI, 2.0%-7.7%; P = .001) increase in percentage of sex matching. Conclusions and Relevance Sex bias in surgical research is prevalent among male and female authors; however, female authors included proportionally more female participants in their studies compared with male authors. Notably, studies that addressed sex bias were rewarded by the scientific community with increased citations of their published work.

[1]  Anne Freeman,et al.  Inclusion of sex and gender in biomedical research: survey of clinical research proposed at the University of Pennsylvania , 2017, Biology of Sex Differences.

[2]  J. Freeman,et al.  Sex‐specific characterization and evaluation of the Alzheimer's disease genetic risk factor sorl1 in zebrafish during aging and in the adult brain following a 100 ppb embryonic lead exposure , 2017, Journal of applied toxicology : JAT.

[3]  M. Kibbe,et al.  Sex Bias Exists in Human Surgical Clinical Research , 2016 .

[4]  Katharina Wolf,et al.  Gendered Authorship and Demographic Research: An Analysis of 50 Years of Demography , 2016, Demography.

[5]  J. Clayton Studying both sexes: a guiding principle for biomedicine , 2016, FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology.

[6]  M. Walsh Risk of Obstructive Sleep Apnea: Sex Matters. , 2015, Circulation.

[7]  P. Stella,et al.  A gender based analysis of predictors of all cause death after transcatheter aortic valve implantation. , 2014, The American journal of cardiology.

[8]  M. Kibbe,et al.  Sex bias exists in basic science and translational surgical research. , 2014, Surgery.

[9]  T. Woodruff Sex, equity, and science , 2014, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[10]  E. Peterson,et al.  Sex‐Based Differences in Outcomes After Percutaneous Coronary Intervention for Acute Myocardial Infarction: A Report From TRANSLATE‐ACS , 2014, Journal of the American Heart Association.

[11]  E. Unger,et al.  Zolpidem and driving impairment--identifying persons at risk. , 2013, The New England journal of medicine.

[12]  Z. Gong,et al.  Inverted Expression Profiles of Sex-Biased Genes in Response to Toxicant Perturbations and Diseases , 2013, PloS one.

[13]  F. Franconi,et al.  Sex and gender in adverse drug events, addiction, and placebo. , 2012, Handbook of experimental pharmacology.

[14]  D. Inzitari,et al.  SEX DIFFERENCES IN PRESENTATION, SEVERITY, AND MANAGEMENT OF STROKE IN A POPULATION-BASED STUDY , 2010, Neurology.

[15]  S. Gall,et al.  Sex differences in presentation, severity, and management of stroke in a population-based study , 2010, Neurology.

[16]  Reshma Jagsi,et al.  The representation of women on the editorial boards of major medical journals: a 35-year perspective. , 2008, Archives of internal medicine.

[17]  R. Hughes Sex does matter: comments on the prevalence of male-only investigations of drug effects on rodent behaviour , 2007, Behavioural pharmacology.

[18]  J. Mogil,et al.  The case for the inclusion of female subjects in basic science studies of pain , 2005, Pain.

[19]  J. Manson,et al.  A Randomized Trial of Low-Dose Aspirin in the Primary Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease in Women , 2005, The New England journal of medicine.

[20]  A. Schroen,et al.  Women in Academic General Surgery , 2004, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.

[21]  V. Pinn,et al.  Sex and gender factors in medical studies: implications for health and clinical practice. , 2003, JAMA.

[22]  F. Couper,et al.  Zolpidem and driving impairment. , 2001, Journal of forensic sciences.

[23]  C. Meinert,et al.  Gender representation in trials. , 2000, Controlled clinical trials.

[24]  D. Federman,et al.  Reviews and Notes: Ethics: Women and Health Research: Ethical and Legal Issues of Including Women in Clinical Studies , 1995, Annals of Internal Medicine.

[25]  Guideline for the study and evaluation of gender differences in the clinical evaluation of drugs; notice. , 1993, Federal register.

[26]  Final report on the aspirin component of the ongoing Physicians' Health Study. , 1989, The New England journal of medicine.