Abstract:
Currently, published systematic review protocols (SR protocols) have increasingly become
a new trend in fields such as acupuncture and are therefore a new source of quotations in these
fields. Systematic reviews are considered the pinnacle of the evidence pyramid as they embody
comprehensive literature searching. Quotations are key elements to achieve this goal as they can
support the assertions of the original authors, but the ¿misquotation¿ exists, too, and they can be
misleading to the reader. The aim of this study was to examine the quotation accuracy of SR protocols
in a meta-analysis on acupuncture research. We searched SCOPUS through 31 December, 2020,
and each protocol and its citations were analyzed and classified as correct or incorrect. We used
descriptive statistics to report the quotation errors and characteristics of the included protocols. The
results showed 248 SR protocols, where 124 protocols received quotations and 38 quotations (31.4%)
were erroneous. Only 11 (4.4%) of the published SRs and SR protocols had been published previously.
Furthermore, the scientific journal in which the most SR protocols were published was Medicine (193;
77.8%), followed by BMJ Open (39; 15.7%). Authors from China (86.5%) were the most productive
in publishing SRs and SR protocols. Finally, we concluded that the number of SR protocols and
meta-analyses published in scientific journals and indexed by databases exceeds the publication
capacity of the SRs associated with them, generating scientific literature that does not make any novel
contribution to knowledge.
Keywords: systematic reviews; systematic review protocols; acupuncture