TY - JOUR
T1 - Trends of Neurosurgical Publications in High-Impact Medical Journals
T2 - A Bibliometric Study
AU - Khorasanizadeh, Mir Hojjat
AU - Shahbandi, Ataollah
AU - Maroufi, Seyed Farzad
AU - Taghipour, Pourya
AU - Sayedsalehi, Shiva
AU - Zeinaddini-Meymand, Arman
AU - Imeni Kashan, Azadeh
AU - Panov, Fedor
AU - Kellner, Christopher P.
AU - Mocco, J.
AU - Shrivastava, Raj
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Background: The subspecialized, clinically complex nature of neurosurgery should not result in marginalization or under-representation of neurosurgical scientific output. This study aims to provide an overview of the trends of neurosurgical publications in high-impact medical journals during the past 3 decades. Methods: An electronic database search was performed to identify all articles affiliated with neurosurgery departments published in 10 highly regarded medical journals. The trend of the proportion of neurosurgical publications to total publications in these journals was examined over time. Subgroup analyses on the basis of location, setting, domain, grant source, and topic of the articles were performed. Results: Overall, 2090 neurosurgical publications were identified in the selected journals, comprising 0.26% of those journals’ publications. The proportion of neurosurgical publications to total publications in these journals increased over time, from 0.03% before 1991 to 0.35% after 2020. Most studies were single-center (82.7%), clinical (52.4%), and primary research (89%). The United States (40.1%), China (12.4%) and the United Kingdom (7.1%) had the greatest number of neurosurgical publications among those analyzed. The share of clinical neurosurgical articles increased over time compared with basic and translational articles (P = 0.01). Among neurosurgical subspecialties, neuro-oncology (60.1%), vascular (19.0%), and general (7.0%) had the greatest number of publications identified, with substantial increases in vascular publications over time. The mean number of citations per year received by neurosurgical articles has increased over time, from 1.65 (before 1991) to 4.12 (2010–2020). Conclusions: Neurosurgery's proportion of high-impact journal publications has increased over time.
AB - Background: The subspecialized, clinically complex nature of neurosurgery should not result in marginalization or under-representation of neurosurgical scientific output. This study aims to provide an overview of the trends of neurosurgical publications in high-impact medical journals during the past 3 decades. Methods: An electronic database search was performed to identify all articles affiliated with neurosurgery departments published in 10 highly regarded medical journals. The trend of the proportion of neurosurgical publications to total publications in these journals was examined over time. Subgroup analyses on the basis of location, setting, domain, grant source, and topic of the articles were performed. Results: Overall, 2090 neurosurgical publications were identified in the selected journals, comprising 0.26% of those journals’ publications. The proportion of neurosurgical publications to total publications in these journals increased over time, from 0.03% before 1991 to 0.35% after 2020. Most studies were single-center (82.7%), clinical (52.4%), and primary research (89%). The United States (40.1%), China (12.4%) and the United Kingdom (7.1%) had the greatest number of neurosurgical publications among those analyzed. The share of clinical neurosurgical articles increased over time compared with basic and translational articles (P = 0.01). Among neurosurgical subspecialties, neuro-oncology (60.1%), vascular (19.0%), and general (7.0%) had the greatest number of publications identified, with substantial increases in vascular publications over time. The mean number of citations per year received by neurosurgical articles has increased over time, from 1.65 (before 1991) to 4.12 (2010–2020). Conclusions: Neurosurgery's proportion of high-impact journal publications has increased over time.
KW - Bibliometrics
KW - High-impact
KW - Medical journals
KW - Neurosurgery
KW - Publications
KW - Trend
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85203510064&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.wneu.2024.07.205
DO - 10.1016/j.wneu.2024.07.205
M3 - Review article
C2 - 39111658
AN - SCOPUS:85203510064
SN - 1878-8750
JO - World Neurosurgery
JF - World Neurosurgery
ER -