Methods: Publications related to pectus deformities from January 1975 to April 2020 were scanned using the Web of Science Core Collection database. The publications were ranked from maximum to minimum according to the number of citations and were examined in detail.
Results: The 100 articles were published in 27 different journals and received a total of 8,290 citations. The average of the impact factors of journals in 2018 was 4.441. The mean citation density of all articles was 5.1±3.8. In the past years, a surgical technique definition and experience transfer were more frequently used, while complications and technical details were started to be presented in recent years.
Conclusion: Our study results suggest that the studies of pectus deformities would continue and, from now on, issues such as complications and technical details would come to the forefront in the articles.
Bibliometric analyses are the studies which best show knowledge memory in a research area. In many areas, bibliometric analyses have been conducted, and the number of citations and articles has been shown to be useful in a particular area. In addition to general areas such as cardiac surgery and general thoracic surgery, bibliometric studies have been conducted on subspecialty issues, such as burns and rheumatoid arthritis.[3-6]
In the present study, we aimed to examine the development of knowledge on pectus deformities through a meticulous analysis of the 100 most-cited articles published on this topic.
The names of the journals, number of citations, year of publication, citation density (citation number/time since publication), principal author and country, type of article and subject were examined for the 100 most-cited articles. The impact factors of journals in 2018 were examined.
Since this study is a bibliometric analysis and publicly available information was compiled, ethical approval was waived.
Statistical analysis
Statistical analysis was performed using the IBM
SPSS version 25.0 software (IBM Corp., Armonk,
NY, USA). The suitability of the data to normal
distribution was checked using the Shapiro-Wilk-
Francia test. The Spearman's rho test was used to
examine the correlations among variables. A p value of
<0.05 was considered statistically significant with 95%
confidence interval (CI).
Table 1: Rankings of 100 most-cited articles
"A 10-year review of a minimally invasive technique for the correction of pectus excavatum" published in the Journal of Pediatric Surgery in 1998 was the article having the highest total number -638 citations- and also registered the highest number of citations per year with 29.
Journals and impact factors
Of the 100 articles with the highest number of
citations, the journal that published the most articles
on pectus deformities was the Journal of Pediatric
Surgery. While there were 36 publications in this
journal, the total number of citations was 3.362. This
number of citations constituted 40.5% of all citations
received by the articles in the first 100 rankings.
This was followed by the Annals of Thoracic
Surgery (10 articles), which published the second
most articles in the top 100 citation rankings about
pectus deformities. The total number of citations in
this journal was 698. The journal with the highest
number of citations per article was the Journal of
Bone and Joint Surgery- American Volume with an
average of 177.6 citations.
The mean of the impact factors of the 27 journals with articles among the 100 most-cited in 2018 was 4.441 (1.062-16.494) (Table 2).
Table 2: Impact factors and citation numbers of top 10 journals
Citation density and years of publication
All articles were published between 1980 and
2013, and the mean citation density of all articles was
5.1±3.8 (min 1.2 - max 29). There were 33 articles
above this average, and the citation density of the
other 67 articles was below the mean density.
The article, with the highest citation density (n=29), was also the article with the highest number of citations: "A 10-year review of a minimally invasive technique for the correction of pectus excavatum".[7] This was followed by the third and seventh most-cited articles "The characteristics of thoracic insufficiency syndrome associated with fused ribs and congenital scoliosis" and "Twenty-One Years of Experience With Minimally Invasive Repair of Pectus Excavatum by the Nuss Procedure in 1,215 Patients" which had the second and third highest citation densities-16.88 and 16.3, respectively.[8,9]
When the articles were sorted by decades, most articles (n=68) in the top 100 were published between 2000 and 2009 (Figure 1). Years with more than three articles published were examined, and 2006 ranked the first (n=11) (Figure 2). The average number of citations for those 11 articles from 2006 was 57.9 (46-91).
Figure 1: Articles sorted by decades.
Figure 2: Years with more than three articles published.
Authors and countries
Kelly was the principal author having the highest
number of articles with six. The principal author with
the most citations per article was Nuss with 285. The
highest numbers of cited publications by country were
from the United States (n=55), Germany (n=7), Canada
(n=6), and South Korea (n=5) (Figure 3).
Figure 3: World map of top 100 most-cited articles.
Subject
The most discussed topic, with 3,304 citations in
35 articles, was experience transfer regarding results
of surgical techniques (Nuss and Ravitch procedures
and modifications). In the second place, 10 articles
with 786 citations discussed complications following
pectus deformity surgery (Table 3).
Table 3: Number of article and citation according to top 10 subject
Technical details and experience transfer related to a surgical technique showed an increasing trend over the last two decades. The articles related to the complications of surgery started to receive high citations after 2000s. Studies on cardiopulmonary functions were found to be highly cited in every period (Table 4).
Table 4: Distribution of the subjects by decades
Types of articles
The article types were classified as 82 original
articles (48 retrospective articles, 34 prospective
articles), eight review articles, seven case reports, and
three meta-analyses.
There was no statistically significant relationship between the impact factor and the number of articles, the number of citations, and the average number of citations (p=0.965, p=0.571, and p=0.372, respectively) (Table 5). However, there was a strong positive correlation (r=0.886) between the number of articles in a journal and the number of citations, which was statistically significant (p<0.001). As the number of published articles increased, the number of citations increased accordingly (Table 6, Figure 4).
Table 6: Correlation between the number of articles in a journal and the number of citations
The number of citations objectively reflects the strength of the impact of a scientific article and is considered an academic evaluation criterion for researchers. The number of citations is known as the best criterion for analyzing the impact of a journal or of a single article; however, annual citation density is important to compare two articles in a bibliometric study. In this study, the articles ranked the first, third, and seventh in number of citations were the top three according to the citation density. Thus, we consider that the density of citations should be taken into consideration in addition to the number of citations in a bibliometric study.
The fact that 17 authors who published more than one article on the list also underscores the importance of the average number of citations per article. While Kelly authored the most articles, the author with the highest average number of citations per article was Nuss, showing that not only the number of articles should be taken into account. Of note, the Ravitch's articles, which were groundbreaking in pectus deformities by defining an important surgical technique and frequently defining it in comparison with the Nuss procedure in two-technique comparisons, as noted above, remained out of this study, as they were published long before 1975.[10,11]
Sixty-eight of the top 100 articles cited were published between 2000 and 2009. In this peak period, a "golden age" of academic studies related to pectus deformities, mainly experienced with a single surgical technique (n=25), complications (n=9), and cardiopulmonary function (n=7) were studied and presented on the academic platform.
The articles designed prospectively constitute 41.4% of the original articles, while the retrospective studies were on experience transfer in the form of larger series of cases with long follow-up.
The main limitation of this study is that only Web of Science Core Collection data and post-1975 data were evaluated. However, Web of Science is a generally accepted database that scans SCI-EXPANDED, SSCI, A & HCI, CPCI-S, CPCI-SSH, BKCI-S, BKCI-SSH, ESCI indexes and contains the majority of the citations available.
In conclusion, bibliometric analyses play an important role in determining the non-contact points of a subject, understanding the most controversial issues, and even choosing the journal to which an article would be submitted. According to the number and density of citations, a surgical or non-surgical technique begins to be undertaken as a routine or the gold standard in practice and is the pioneer of successive articles in this regard. Our study results suggest that the studies of pectus deformities would continue and, from now on, issues such as complications and technical details would come to the forefront in the articles.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with respect to
the authorship and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The authors received no financial support for the research
and/or authorship of this article.
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