Abstract

BackgroundThe research community reacted rapidly to the emergence of COVID-19. We aimed to assess characteristics of journal articles, preprint articles, and registered trial protocols about COVID-19 and its causal agent SARS-CoV-2.MethodsWe analyzed characteristics of journal articles with original data indexed by March 19, 2020, in World Health Organization (WHO) COVID-19 collection, articles published on preprint servers medRxiv and bioRxiv by April 3, 2010. Additionally, we assessed characteristics of clinical trials indexed in the WHO International Clinical Trials Registry Platform (WHO ICTRP) by April 7, 2020.ResultsAmong the first 2118 articles on COVID-19 published in scholarly journals, 533 (25%) contained original data. The majority was published by authors from China (75%) and funded by Chinese sponsors (75%); a quarter was published in the Chinese language. Among 312 articles that self-reported study design, the most frequent were retrospective studies (N = 88; 28%) and case reports (N = 86; 28%), analyzing patients’ characteristics (38%). Median Journal Impact Factor of journals where articles were published was 5.099.Among 1088 analyzed preprint articles, the majority came from authors affiliated in China (51%) and were funded by sources in China (46%). Less than half reported study design; the majority were modeling studies (62%), and analyzed transmission/risk/prevalence (43%).Of the 927 analyzed registered trials, the majority were interventional (58%). Half were already recruiting participants. The location for the conduct of the trial in the majority was China (N = 522; 63%). The median number of planned participants was 140 (range: 1 to 15,000,000). Registered intervention trials used highly heterogeneous primary outcomes and tested highly heterogeneous interventions; the most frequently studied interventions were hydroxychloroquine (N = 39; 7.2%) and chloroquine (N = 16; 3%).ConclusionsEarly articles on COVID-19 were predominantly retrospective case reports and modeling studies. The diversity of outcomes used in intervention trial protocols indicates the urgent need for defining a core outcome set for COVID-19 research. Chinese scholars had a head start in reporting about the new disease, but publishing articles in Chinese may limit their global reach. Mapping publications with original data can help finding gaps that will help us respond better to the new public health emergency.

Highlights

  • The research community reacted rapidly to the emergence of COVID-19

  • The Chinese authorities have isolated a causal agent on 7 January 2020, which was identified as a new type of coronavirus [1], titled “severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2” (SARS-CoV-2) and the disease it causes “coronavirus disease” (COVID-19) [2]

  • This study aimed to identify and classify published original research studies, preprint articles and registered clinical trials regarding the SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 from December 1, 2019, until March/April 2020, the period which would correspond to the first months following the outbreak

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Summary

Introduction

The research community reacted rapidly to the emergence of COVID-19. We aimed to assess characteristics of journal articles, preprint articles, and registered trial protocols about COVID-19 and its causal agent SARS-CoV-2. The Chinese authorities have isolated a causal agent on 7 January 2020, which was identified as a new type of coronavirus (novel coronavirus, nCoV) [1], titled “severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2” (SARS-CoV-2) and the disease it causes “coronavirus disease” (COVID-19) [2]. After emerging in China, the virus has spread rapidly throughout the world. On March 19, 2020, a simple search of PubMed, using the most common terms associated with the new virus and disease (coronavirus OR COVID-19 OR COVID 19 OR SARS-CoV-2), revealed that almost 2000 such articles were published since December 1, 2019. Cursory browsing of those articles indicated that the majority of them appeared to be editorials, news, and opinions

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