Outcome measurement |
6 (9%) |
8 (3%) |
Journal publication contains more detail on how outcome was measured compared with preprint (n=3)
Journal publication reports an additional or different measurement than the one used for the same outcome in the preprint (eg, preprint reports four adverse events, journal publication reports 12) (n=4)
|
Units of measurement |
3 (4%) |
3 (1%) |
For example, journal publication reports events, total and percentage for mortality, preprint reports only percentage; median (IQR) reported in journal publication, mean (SD) in preprint
|
Timepoint assessment was made |
10 (15%) |
24 (9%) |
|
Numerical values reported |
24 (36%) |
52 (20%) |
Differences in number of events or measurement values reported (n=17)
Differences in numbers of participants or denominators (n=5)
More adverse events reported in journal publication than preprint (n=4)
|
Finding of statistical significance |
11 (16%) |
16 (6%) |
Different p-value reported with no change in significance (n=3)
Different p-value reported with change in significance; significant result reported in journal publication (n=1)
In multivariate models, journal publication and preprint report different variables as being statistically significant (n=2)
|
Statistical tests performed |
17 (25%) |
31 (12%) |
Journal publication contains additional statistical analysis compared with preprint (n=7)
Journal publication uses different statistical adjustments compared with preprint (n=7)
Journal publication and preprint use different statistical tests for same data (n=3)
|
Subgroup analyses conducted |
14 (21%) |
24 (9%) |
Journal publication includes subgroup analysis not included in preprint (n=6)
Journal publication finds statistically significant interaction for subgroup, preprint does not (n=1)
|
Identifying the outcome as a primary or secondary outcome |
1 (1%) |
3 (1%) |
|