# A pilot study investigating the relationship between journal impact factor and methodological quality of real-world observational studies

**Authors:** Digant Gupta, Amandeep Kaur, Mansi Malik

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/frma.2025.1679842 · 2025-10-22

## TL;DR

This study found a weak link between journal impact factor and the quality of real-world observational studies, suggesting high-quality research can appear in lower-impact journals.

## Contribution

The study is novel in analyzing the relationship between journal impact factor and methodological quality across a large set of observational studies.

## Key findings

- There was a weak positive correlation between journal impact factor and study quality (NOS score).
- High-quality studies were found in journals with lower impact factors.
- No correlation was observed in industry-funded or prospective cohort studies.

## Abstract

The primary objective of this study was to investigate the association between journal Impact Factor (IF) and study quality in real-world observational studies. The secondary objective was to explore whether the association changes as a function of different study factors (study design, funding type and geographic location).

Study quality was assessed using the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale (NOS). IFs were obtained from journal websites. The association between journal IF and NOS score was evaluated firstly using Spearman's correlation coefficient, and secondly using one-way Analysis of Variance (ANOVA).

We selected 457 studies published in 208 journals across 11 consecutive systematic literature reviews (SLRs) conducted at our organization over the last 5 years. Most studies were cross-sectional and from North America or Europe. Mean (SD) NOS score was 6.6 (1.03) and mean (SD) IF was 5.2 (4.5). Overall, there was a weak positive correlation between NOS score and IF (Spearman's coefficient (ρ) = 0.23 [95% CI: 0.13–0.31]; p < 0.001). There was no correlation between NOS score and IF for prospective cohort studies (ρ = 0.07 [95% CI:−0.12–0.25]) and industry-funded studies (ρ = 0.06 [95% CI:−0.09–0.21]). Based on ANOVA, the effect size, eta squared (η2), was 0.04 (95% CI: 0.01–0.08), indicating a small effect.

While there is some correlation between journal quality and study quality, our findings indicate that high-quality research can be found in journals with lower IF, and assessing study quality requires careful review of study design, methodology, analysis, interpretation, and significance of the findings. Notably, in industry-funded studies, no correlation was found between methodological quality and IF.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** hemophilia (MESH:D006467), episodic and chronic migraine (MESH:D008881), depression (MESH:D003866), Crohn's disease (MESH:D003424), diabetic macular edema (MESH:D008269), rare diseases (MESH:D035583), anemia (MESH:D000740), epilepsy (MESH:D004827), Angelman syndrome (MESH:D017204), pruritis (MESH:D011537), low back pain (MESH:D017116), diabetic macular ischemia (MESH:D007511), diabetic gastroparesis (MESH:D018589), stroke (MESH:D020521), age-related macular degeneration (MESH:D008268), chronic kidney disease (MESH:D051436), sleep disturbances (MESH:D012893)
- **Species:** Meleagris gallopavo (common turkey, species) [taxon 9103]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12586066/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12586066