• World Neurosurg · Oct 2020

    Traumatic Spine Injury: which discrepancy between the Research Output and the actual Burden of the Disease?

    • Maria Pia Tropeano, Riccardo Spaggiari, Hernán Ileyassoff, Delisile J D Mabunda, Carla D Anania, Francesco Costa, Maurizio Fornari, Salman Sharif, Mehmet Zileli, Kee B Park, and Franco Servadei.
    • Humanitas Clinical and Research Center, IRCCS, Rozzano, Italy.
    • World Neurosurg. 2020 Oct 1; 142: e117-e125.

    ObjectiveTraumatic spinal injury (TSI) is a global health issue contributing to morbidity and mortality, especially in low- and middle-income countries. The aim of this study is to compare the epidemiological estimates of TSI with the corresponding amount of published papers for different regions.MethodsA bibliometric analysis was performed by collecting the number of publications concerning TSI from the PubMed database. Results were sorted according to the different geographical World Health Organization regions. A "publication-to-volume ratio" was obtained by comparing the average number of documents per year with the number of TSI cases across each region.ResultsA total of 2304 articles were detected from 2008 to 2018. The major publishing regions were North America (AMR-US/Can: 843 articles, 36.6%) and Europe (EUR: 833, 36.2%), then Western Pacific (WPR: 410, 17.8%), Eastern Mediterranean (EMR: 73, 3.2%), South-East Asia (SEAR: 71, 3.1%), Latin America (AMR-L: 55, 2.4%), Africa (AFR: 19, 0.8%). The United States is the most publishing country in AMR-US/Can (86.0%), and Germany in EUR (22.4%). In 2018, EUR published 36.6% of papers versus AMR-US/Can 26.5% and WPR 25.7%, thanks to an increase in Chinese publications. The highest publication ratios of 4.63 and 2.68 were found for AMR-US/Can and EUR, respectively. The other were EMR (0.22), WPR (0.18), AMR-L (0.07), SEAR (0.03), and AFR (0.01).ConclusionsA marked divide is currently found between countries with a high burden of TSI and those where there is most research interest, estimated as amount of publications. Data demonstrate the need for increased inclusiveness in guidelines generation from high-income countries including collection and analysis from low- and middle-income countries.Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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