Speed science: The risks of swiftly spreading coronavirus research
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[February 20, 2020]
By Kate Kelland
LONDON (Reuters) - One scientific post
suggests links between the new coronavirus and AIDS, a second says it
may have passed to people via snakes, while a third claims it is a
pathogen from outer space.
The emergence in China of a new human coronavirus that is causing an
epidemic of flu-like disease has sparked a parallel viral spread:
science – ranging from robust to rogue - is being conducted, posted and
shared at an unprecedented rate.
While speedy scientific analysis is highly useful if it's good, flawed
or misleading science can sow panic and may make a disease epidemic
worse by prompting false policy moves or encouraging risky behaviour.
A Reuters analysis found that at least 153 studies - including
epidemiological papers, genetic analyses and clinical reports -
examining every aspect of the disease, now called COVID-19 - have been
posted or published since the start of the outbreak. These involved 675
researchers from around the globe.
By comparison, during the 2003 SARS outbreak, it took more than a year
for even half that number of studies to be published
The risks of swiftly spreading coronavirus research: https://graphics.reuters.com/CHINA-HEALTH-RESEARCH/0100B5ES3MG/index.html.
Richard Horton, editor-in-chief of The Lancet group of science and
medical journals, says he's instituted "surge capacity" staffing to sift
through a flood of 30 to 40 submissions of scientific research a day to
his group alone.
Much of this work, according to those watching its flow and content, is
rigorous and useful. Vaccine developers, clinicians, diagnostic makers
and policy agencies have snapped up genetic codes, phylogenetic trees
and epidemiological models to help them start work on catching the virus
and containing its spread.
But much of it is raw. With most fresh science being posted online
without being peer-reviewed, some of the material lacks scientific
rigour, experts say, and some has already been exposed as flawed, or
plain wrong, and has been withdrawn.
"The public will not benefit from early findings if they are flawed or
hyped," said Tom Sheldon, a science communications specialist at
Britain's non-profit Science Media Centre.
"PREPRINTS"
The threat posed by the new coronavirus requires that information be
shared quickly and freely "without being yoked to peer review", Sheldon
said - and that is causing problems.
The outbreak has in particular encouraged "preprints" - the practice of
researchers immediately posting online their findings without external
checks, scrutiny or validation.
The Reuters analysis scanned material on Google Scholar and on three
preprint servers bioRxiv, medRxiv and ChemRxiv. Of the 153 studies
identified, some 60% were preprints.
Preprints allow their authors to contribute to the scientific debate and
can foster collaboration, but they are not peer-reviewed and can also
bring researchers almost instant, international media and public
attention.
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A medical worker holds a thermometer to check a passenger's
temperature at a checkpoint as the country is hit by an outbreak of
the novel coronavirus in Susong County, Anhui province, China,
February 6, 2020. REUTERS/Thomas Peter/
"Some of the material that's been put out - on preprint servers for
example - clearly has been... unhelpful," said The Lancet's Horton.
"Whether it's fake news or misinformation or rumour-mongering, it's
certainly contributed to fear and panic."
BioRxiv has now added a yellow banner warning label across the top
of any new coronavirus research which reads: "A reminder: these are
preliminary reports that have not been peer-reviewed. They should
not be regarded as conclusive, guide clinical practice (or)
health-related behaviour, or be reported in news media as
established information."
One example was work by scientists in New Delhi, India, who on Jan.
31 posted research pointing to what they called "uncanny"
similarities between the new coronavirus and HIV, the virus that
causes AIDS.
The work was criticised by scientists around the world and swiftly
retracted, but had already featured in more than 17,000 tweets and
been picked up by 25 news outlets.
Another was a submission sent to The Lancet by a researcher working
in Britain who claims the source of the new coronavirus may be
"viral in-fall" from outer space.
And a study published online in the Journal of Medical Virology on
Jan. 22, now known as "the snake paper", led to a rush of rumours
that the China disease outbreak may be a kind of "snake flu".
Leading genetic experts cast swift doubt on the paper's findings,
but not before it had gone viral.
PRESSURE
Part of the problem is pressure. To be first with a scientific
finding is good for profile and for future funding - especially in
the context of a fast-developing international disease outbreak.
"Due to the evolving nature of the (coronavirus) outbreak,
scientists are often under pressure to communicate their findings in
real time," said Efstathios Giotis, an infectious disease expert at
Imperial College London.
All research claims ought to be rigorously and independently
scrutinised by experts in the field, but that is often not happening
with work on the new coronavirus, Giotis said.
Magdalena Skipper, editor-in-chief of Nature, said her group of
journals, like The Lancet's, was working hard to "select and filter"
submitted manuscripts.
"We will never compromise the rigour of our peer review, and papers
will only be accepted once ... they have been thoroughly assessed,"
she said.
(Reporting by Kate Kelland; Additional reporting by Simon Scarr and
Manas Sharma; Editing by Gareth Jones)
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