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. 2019 Jan;40(1):E3–E4. doi: 10.3174/ajnr.A5885

Disproportionate International Contributions to Subspecialties of Neuroradiology in the American Journal of Neuroradiology

S Emamzadehfard a, V Eslami b, DM Yousem c, S Sahraian c
PMCID: PMC7048593  PMID: 30523138

In a follow-up study to our article entitled, “Who's Contributing Most to American Neuroscience Journals: American or Foreign Authors?”1 we looked at the various branches of neuroradiology to identify the countries that contribute the most published articles to the American Journal of Neuroradiology (AJNR). We had shown that contributions to the AJNR by foreign institutions have dramatically increased in recent decades.1 We subsequently examined whether all areas of neuroradiology have been equally affected in the AJNR.

For this analysis, we assessed the country of the first author's institution in published articles in the past 30 AJNR issues (January 2016 to June 2018) to determine the contributions to Brain, Head & Neck (H&N), Spine, Neurointerventional Radiology (NIR), and Pediatrics (Ped) sections. In addition to calculating the percentage of US authorship, we determined which countries were contributing the most to each branch of neuroradiology.

We reviewed 793 articles. Overall, 350 (44.1%) articles were from American institutions, and 443 (55.9%) were from non-American institutions. The percentages of articles from US institutions were 44.4% in 2016, 47.2% in 2017, and 37.4% from January to June 2018. The percentage of US authorship was least in NIR (31.8%; P < .001) and Brain (41.5%; P = .21), while it was significantly higher than non-US authorship in Spine (60.7%; P = .002), followed by H&N (53.7%), and Ped (51.3%) (Figure).

FIGURE.

FIGURE.

Contribution of US and Non-US countries to different subsections of the AJNR. Values are expressed as number of articles and were analyzed using the χ2 independence test. Double asterisks show P < .01 compared with the other groups.

The foreign countries that had the highest contributions in Brain, H&N, Spine, Ped, and NIR were Japan, Korea, Canada, Italy, and Germany, respectively (Table).

Top 2 foreign countries with highest contributions to subsections of AJNR

Specialty Top Country Contributor Top Country (No. of Articles) (% of Non-US) No. 2 Country Contributor No. 2 Country (No. of Articles) (% of Non-US)
Brain Japan 28 (14.3%) China 24 (12.2%)
H&N Korea 15 (39.5%) China 6 (15.8%)
NIR Germany 22 (18.6%) France 19 (16.1%)
Pediatrics Italy 12 (20.6%) Canada 8 (13.8%)
Spine Canada 10 (30.3%) Switzerland 4 (12.1%)

We concluded that contributions to the AJNR from non-US authors dominated in the NIR category, likely due to the more restrictive limitations of the FDA on new NIR devices compared with the more lenient oversight in Europe by their governmental bodies, such as the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency in the United Kingdom and the French Organization for the Safety of Health Products. Asian countries may contribute more to H&N due to the increased prevalence of thyroid and nasopharyngeal carcinomas and Epstein–Barr Virus infections. Europeans and Canadians publish more than those in Asian countries in Pediatrics, in part from noteworthy Italian authorities in pediatric neuroradiology. The US prominence is foremost in the spine, and Canada dominates the non-US spine contributions. Overall, the contributions from non-US authors (55.9%) exceeded those originating from the United States (44.1%).

Footnotes

Disclosures: David M. Yousem—UNRELATED: expert testimony: medicolegal work; Payment for Lectures Including Service on Speakers Bureaus: American College of Radiology Education Center; Royalties: Elsevier, Comments: 5 books; Travel/Accommodations/Meeting Expenses Unrelated to Activities Listed: Radiological Society of North American Educator Career Award 2018.

Reference

  • 1. Charkhchi P, Mirbolouk M, Jalilian R, et al. Who's contributing most to American neuroscience journals: American or foreign authors? AJNR Am J Neuroradiol 2018;39:1001–07 10.3174/ajnr.A5624 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]

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