To identify the most cited articles in general surgery published by Brazilian authors.
INTRODUCTIONThere are several ways for the international community to recognize the quality of a scientific article. Although controversial, the most widely used and reliable methodology to identify the importance of an article is citation analysis.
METHODSA search using the Institute for Scientific Information citation database (Science Citation Index Expanded) was performed to identify highly cited Brazilian papers published in twenty-six highly cited general surgery journals, selected based on their elevated impact factors, from 1970 to 2009. Further analysis was done on the 65 most-cited papers.
RESULTSWe identified 1,713 Brazilian articles, from which nine papers emerged as classics (more than 100 citations received). For the Brazilian contributions, a total increase of about 21-fold was evident between 1970 and 2009. Although several topics were covered, articles covering trauma, oncology and organ transplantation were the most cited. The majority of classic studies were done with international cooperation.
CONCLUSIONSThis study identified the most influential Brazilian articles published in internationally renowned general surgery journals.
A central aspect of general surgery is the diversity of topics and domains. General surgery has become one of the most well-known medical specialties. At present, general surgery boasts remarkable developments and refinements in basic science, diagnosis and treatment that have transcended abdominal organs, touching neighboring and more distal branches of medicine. Advances in scientific surgical research have benefited the care of men and women of all ages.
A scientific article’s impact is established over time. Because publications inspire future articles, a paper’s scientific impact can be measured in terms of the number of citations received.1 Increasing numbers of scientific papers in the Internet era have provided diverse information. The frequency of citations serves as a rough guide to the importance of an article. The impact factor (IF) is now generally used to measure the prestige of journals, the influence of articles published in those journals and, by extension, the authors, institutions and countries.2 In Brazil, the national agency (CNPQ) dedicated to promoting scientific and technological research has used the IF as an indicator of the national research output and to define investment priorities.3
In this paper, our goal was to identify the most frequently cited articles published by Brazilian authors in the most-cited international journals dedicated to general surgery. We aimed to provide an opportunity to recognize key historical advances and the evolution of surgery research in Brazil.
MATERIALS AND METHODSTo identify the most frequently cited Brazilian papers published in general surgery journals, we accessed the Thompson Web of Knowledge database (Institute for Scientific Information - ISI).4 Inclusion criteria included articles with at least one Brazilian author and published in the 26 highly cited journals in the field of general surgery. These journals were selected based on their 2008 impact factor (Journal Citation Report). The search was limited to the period between January 1970 and June 2009.
The articles were identified and analyzed with respect to their authors, institution, year of publication, number of citations and topics.
An additional analysis was performed for articles that received more than 30 citations.
RESULTSOf the 208,168 articles included in the study, 1,713 (0.8%) were published by Brazilian authors. Nine were cited over 100 times, and these were considered classics.5 The 26 screened journals are listed in Table 1. Analyzing the ranking of each country’s contributions, Brazilian authors achieved the 19th overall position.
Brazilian scientific contribution on the screened general surgery journals, during the period of 1970–2009 years.
Impact factor | Articles published (n) | Brazilian articles published (n) | Brazil (countries ranking position) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Annals of Surgery | 7.446 | 10.121 | 14 (0.13%) | 29th |
2 | American Journal of Transplantation | 6.423 | 9.323 | 93 (0.99%) | 14th |
3 | British Journal of Surgery | 4.304 | 23.992 | 24 (0.10%) | 40th |
4 | American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 4.181 | 5.884 | 17 (0.28%) | 29th |
5 | Endoscopy | 3.917 | 6.363 | 62 (0.97%) | 23rd |
6 | Annals of Surgical Oncology | 3.917 | 5.457 | 30 (0.54%) | 19th |
7 | Liver transplantation | 3.751 | 5.255 | 262 (4.90%) | 7th |
8 | Transplantation | 3.641 | 22.092 | 107 (0.48%) | 21st |
9 | Archives of Surgery | 3.485 | 12.444 | 17 (0.13%) | 27th |
10 | Shock | 3.325 | 5.677 | 100 (1.76%) | 10th |
11 | Journal of the American College of Surgeons | 3.101 | 6.008 | 20 (0.33%) | 15th |
12 | Surgery | 3.004 | 12.696 | 21 (0.16%) | 29th |
13 | Obesity Surgery | 2.852 | 4.559 | 411 (9.01%) | 3rd |
14 | Lasers in Surgery and Medicine | 2.700 | 5.390 | 135 (0.27%) | 7th |
15 | Diseases of the Colon and Rectum | 2.621 | 10.420 | 67 (0.64%) | 18th |
16 | Wound repair and regeneration | 2.445 | 1.846 | 14 (0.75%) | 17th |
17 | Journal of burn care and rehabilitation | 2.421 | 801 | 4 (0.49%) | 20th |
18 | Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2.384 | 5.660 | 26 (0.45%) | 21st |
19 | American Journal of Surgery | 2.337 | 13.389 | 46 (0.34%) | 22nd |
20 | Journal of Trauma – Injury, Infection and Critical Care | 2.334 | 14.620 | 49 (0.33%) | 22nd |
21 | Transplant International | 2.300 | 3.879 | 43 (1.10%) | 21st |
22 | Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery | 2.272 | 2.256 | 28 (1.24%) | 12th |
23 | Surgical Endoscopy and other Interventional Techniques | 2.242 | 3.769 | 25 (0.66%) | 24th |
24 | Clinical Transplantation | 1.923 | 2.320 | 37 (1.59%) | 12th |
25 | Journal of Surgical Research | 1.836 | 7.881 | 21 (0.26%) | 23rd |
26 | World Journal of Surgery | 1.778 | 6.066 | 40 (0.66%) | 30th |
Total | 208.163 | 1713 (0.82%) | 19th |
Brazilian contributions to those journals are listed by decades and presented in Table 2. Regarding Brazil’s overall contribution, a rising curve was evident, with Brazil climbing from the 34th position (0.07%) in the seventies to the 13th position in the 2000s (1.47%). Figure 1 shows the number of Brazilian papers published in each year since 1970.
The Brazilian most-cited articles in general surgery listed by periods, 1970–2009.
Decade Period | No Brazilian/total papers published (%) | Brazil overall contributing countries ranking | Papers cited ≥100 times (n) |
---|---|---|---|
1970/1979 | 17/22.348 (0.07) | 34th | - |
1980/1989 | 71/34.940 (0.20) | 28th | 1 |
1990/1999 | 182/52.977 (0.34) | 26th | 5 |
2000/2009 | 1.441/97.455 (1.47) | 13th | 3 |
Total | 1.713/207.720 (0.82) | 19th | 9 |
Because only nine Brazilian articles reached the classic denomination (article with more than 100 citations), we further evaluated all of the articles with more than 30 citations (the top 65 articles). This cutoff was decided arbitrarily. Table 3 summarizes the designs of the 65 articles identified to have more than 30 citations. We observed a tendency for retrospective series and cohorts (56.9%), while randomized trials accounted for 10/65 (15.3%) articles. Twelve (18.4%) experimental studies were included in the list of the top 65.
The Brazilian most-cited articles by study design.
Study Design | The Brazilian most cited articles *(n) |
---|---|
Meta-analysis | 1 (1.5%) |
Randomized clinical trials | 10 (15.3%) |
Experimental studies | 12 (18.4%) |
Case series/cohorts | 37 (56.9%) |
Review articles | 5 (7.7%) |
Case reports | 0 (0) |
Topics covered by the “Brazilian Top 65” included oncology, transplantation, trauma and critical care, as listed in Table 4. Other topics were identified in this list, including gastrointestinal endoscopy and dentistry. The topics most frequently covered by the top 65 articles were shock and kidney transplantation at 10 articles each (15.3%), followed by colorectal tumors in 9 (13.8%) articles. Nineteen (29.2%) articles covered themes related to oncology. The second most heavily cited theme was trauma/critical care and organ transplantation, accounting for 15/65 (22.9%) articles each. Aside from these principal categories, bariatric surgery and GI endoscopy were covered in 4/65 (6.1%) papers each (Table 4).
Topics covered.
Topic | Number of articles (n) | (%) |
---|---|---|
Oncology | ||
Colorectal | 9 | 13.8 |
Gastric | 3 | 4.6 |
Renal pathology | 2 | 3.1 |
Neck tumors | 2 | 3.1 |
Eshopagus | 1 | 1.5 |
Sarcoma | 1 | 1.5 |
Breast | 1 | 1.5 |
Trauma and critical care | ||
Shock | 10 | 15.3 |
Sepsis | 3 | 4.6 |
Abdominal compartment syndrome | 1 | 1.5 |
Penetrating abdominal wounds | 1 | 1.5 |
Organ Transplantation | ||
Kidney | 10 | 15.3 |
Liver | 1 | 1.5 |
General | 4 | 6.1 |
Bariatric surgery | 4 | 6.1 |
Hepato-Biliary diseases | ||
Laparoscopic cholecystectomy | 1 | 1.5 |
Portal hypertension | 1 | 1.5 |
Gastrointestinal endoscopy | 4 | 6.1 |
Dentistry | 2 | 3.1 |
Others | 3 | 4.6 |
Total (Top-65) | 65 |
The 30 most-cited articles are presented in Table 5. The range of citations varied from 49 to 194, with an average of 85 citations per article. International collaboration was relevant since the earliest article to make the list, published in 1984 by Abe S et al. (Gama-Rodrigues), described early gastric cancer in Japan.6 The most recent classic (102 citations), published by Tedesco-Silva et al. in 2005, was a phase II international clinical trial describing the immunologic response to FTY720 in kidney transplantation.7 Indeed, eighteen articles (60%) on this list were written with international co-authorship. The article ranked in first place on the list was published in the nineties by Cutait et al. and discussed colorectal cancer staging based on immunohistochemical analysis of micrometastasis in lymph nodes.8
List of the Brazilian thirty most cited articles in general surgery, during the period of 1970–2009 years.
Number of citations | Article | Year | Journal title | 1st author | Brazilian Institutions | Country | Brazilian authors and co-authors | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 194 | Restaging of colorectal cancer based on the identification of lymph node micrometastases through immunoperoxidase staining of CEA and cytokeratins. | 1991 | Dis Colon Rectum | Cutait R, et al. | USP Hosp Sirio Libanes | Brazil | Cutait R, Alves VA, Lopes LC, Cutait DE, Borges JL, Singer J, da Silva JH, Goffi FS. |
2 | 140 | CDX2, a highly sensitive and specific marker of adenocarcinomas of intestinal origin - An immunohistochemical survey of 476 primary and metastatic carcinomas. | 2003 | Am J Surg Patho | Werling RW, et al | Botucatu Unesp | USA/Brazil | Bacchi CE |
3 | 130 | The importance of thiopurine methyltransferase activity for the use of azathioprine in transplant recipients. | 1992 | Transplantation | Chocair PR, et al | USP | Brazil/UK | Chocair PR |
4 | 126 | The influence of intraoperative hypotension and perioperative blood transfusion on disease-free surviral in patients with complete resection of colorectal liver metastasis | 1991 | Ann Surg | Younes RN et al | USP | USA | Younes RN |
5 | 125 | Efficacy of hypertonic 7.5% saline and 6% dextran-70 in treating trauma: a meta-analysis of controlled clinical studies. | 1997 | Surgery | Wade CE, et al. | USP | USA/Brazil | Younes RN |
6 | 112 | Pit pattern in colorectal neoplasia: Endoscopic magnifying view. | 2001 | Endoscopy | Kudo S, et al. | Fugast Porto Alegre | Japan/Brazil/Sweden | Teixeira CR |
7 | 103 | Complications and hazards of gastrointestinal endoscopy. | 1989 | World J Surg | Habr-Gama A, Waye JD | USP | Brazil/USA | Habr-Gama A |
8 | 102 | Prospective randomized trial of mechanical bowel preparation in patients undergoing elective colorectal surgery. | 1994 | World J Surg | Santos JCM, et al. | USP Ribeirao Preto | Brazil | Santos JCM, Batista J, Sirimarco MT, Guimarães AS, Levy CE. |
9 | 102 | FTY720, a novel immunomodulator: efficacy and safety results from the first phase 2. A study in de novo renal transplantation. | 2005 | Transplantation | Tedesco-Silva H, et al. | UNIFESP | Brazil/France/USA/… | Tedesco-Silva H |
10 | 86 | Low rectal cancer - Impact of radiation and chemotherapy on surgical treatment. | 1997 | Dis Colon Rectum | Habr-Gama A, et al. | USP | Brazil | Habr-Gama A, de Souza PMSB, Ribeiro U, Nadalin W, Gansl R, Sousa AHSE, Campos FG, Gama-Rodrigues J |
11 | 86 | Supraomohyoid neck dissection in the treatment of T1/T2 squamous cell carcinoma of oral cavity. | 1994 | Am J Surgery | Kligerman J, et al. | INCA | Brazil | Kligerman J, Lima RA, Soares JR, Prado L, Dias FL, Freitas EQ, Olivatto LO. |
12 | 81 | Operative versus nonoperative treatment for stage 0 distal rectal cancer following chemoradiation therapy – Long-term results. | 2004 | Annals of Surg | Habr-Gama A, et al. | USP | Brazil | Habr-Gama A, Perez RO, Nadalin W, Sabbaga J, Ribeiro U, Sousa AHSE, Campos FG, Kiss DR, Gama-Rodrigues J |
13 | 81 | Everolimus with optimized cyclosporine dosing in renal transplant recipients: 6-month safety and efficacy results of two randomized studies. | 2004 | Am J Transp | Vitko S, et al. | UNIFESP, UNICAMP, Santa Casa Porto Alegre, Hosp Geral Fortaleza | Czech/Brazil/Spain/… | Tedesco H, Alves G, Garcia VD, Esmeraldo R |
14 | 80 | A comparison of nonoperative vs. preoperative radiotherapy in rectal carcinoma. A 10-year randomized trial. | 1989 | Dis Colon Rectum | Reis Neto JA, et al. | PUC Campinas | Brazil | Reis Neto JA, Quilici FA, Reis JÁ |
15 | 77 | Primary renal synovial sarcoma: molecular and morphologic delineation of an entity previously included among embryonal sarcomas of the kidney. | 2000 | Am J Surg Patho | Argani P, et al. | INCA | USA/Brazil | Faria PA |
16 | 74 | The role of lung innervation in the hemodynamic response to hypertonic sodium chloride solutions in hemorrhagic shock. | 1985 | Surgery | Younes RN, et al. | USP | Brazil | Younes RN |
17 | 72 | Exposure-response relationships for everolimus in de novo kidney transplantation: defining a therapeutic range. | 2002 | Transplantation | Kovarik JM, et al. | UNIFESP | Switzerland/USA/Brazil/… | Silva HAT |
18 | 72 | Ghrelin: a gut-brain hormone: Effect of gastric bypass surgery | 2003 | Obes Surg | Geloneze B, et al. | UNICAMP | Brazil | Geloneze B, Tambascia MA, Pilla VF, Geloneze SR, Repetto EM, Pareja JC |
19 | 69 | Diagnostic and therapeutic laparoscopy for penetrating abdominal trauma: A multicenter experience | 1996 | J Trauma | Zantut LF, et al. | USP | Brazil/USA | Zantut LF |
20 | 68 | Hypertonic solutions in the treatment of hypovolemic shock: a prospective, randomized study in patients admitted to the emergency room. | 1992 | Surgery | Younes RN, et al. | USP | Brazil | Younes RN, Aun F, Accioly CQ, Casale LPL, Szajnbok I, Biroloni D. |
21 | 68 | Simultaneous liver and lung injury following gut ischemia is mediated by xanthine oxidase. | 1991 | J Trauma | Poggetti RS, et al. | USP | USA/Brazil | Poggetti RS |
22 | 64 | Early gastric cancer: results in a general hospital in Japan. | 1984 | World J Surg | Abe S, et al. | USP | Japan | GamaRodrigues JJ |
23 | 64 | Focal versus diffuse anaplasia in Wilms tumor–new definitions with prognostic significance: a report from the National Wilms Tumor Study Group. | 1996 | Am J Surg Patho | Faria P, et al. | INCA | USA/Brazil | Faria PA |
24 | 63 | Comparison of the low level laser therapy effects on cultured human gingival fibroblasts proliferation using different irradiance and same fluence. | 2001 | Lasers in Surg Med | Almeida-Lopes L, et al. | USP Univ Vale do Paraiba | Brazil | Almeida-Lopes L, Rigau J, Zangaro RA, Guidugli Neto J, Jaeger MM |
25 | 60 | Effect of low-power laser irradiation on cell growth and procollagen synthesis of cultured fibroblasts | 2002 | Lasers in Surg Med | Pereira AN, et al. | USP | Brazil | Pereira AN, Eduardo CD, Matson E, Marques MM |
26 | 57 | Ertapenem versus piperacillin/tazobactam in the treatment of complicated intraabdominal infections: results of a double-blind, randomized comparative phase III trial. | 2003 | Annals of Surg | Solomkin JS, et al. | Hosp Evangelico Curitiba | USA | Malafaia O |
27 | 57 | Mycophenolate mofetil substitution for cyclosporine a in renal transplant recipients with chronic progressive allograft dysfunction: the “creeping creatinine” study. | 2005 | Transplantation | Dudley C, et al. | UNIFESP | UK/Austria/Czech/Switzerland/Brazil | Silva HAT |
28 | 54 | Individual patient cohort analysis of the efficacy of hypertonic saline/dextran in patients with traumatic brain injury and hypotension. | 1996 | J Trauma | Wade CE, et al. | USP | Sweden/USA/Brazil | Younes RN |
29 | 51 | Everolimus versus mycophenolate mofetil in the prevention of rejection in de novo renal transplant recipients: a 3-year randomized, multicenter, phase III study. | 2005 | Transplantation | Lorber MI, et al. | UNIFESP | USA/Switzerland/Brazil | Tedesco H |
30 | 51 | Results of a prospective trial on elective modified radical classical versus supraomohyoid neck dissection in the management of oral squamous carcinoma. Brazilian Head and Neck Cancer Study Group. | 1998 | Am J Surg | Brentani RR, et al. | Hosp AC Camargo, Hosp Araujo Jorge, USP, Hosp Erasto Gaertner, Hosp Heliopolis, Hosp Napoleao Laureano, UNIFESP, Santa Casa Porto Alegre | Brazil | Brazilian Head and Neck Cancer Study Group |
Analyzing the individual contribution by state, institutions from Sao Paulo authored or co-authored 65% of these articles. The most-published institutions were the University of Sao Paulo/Hospital de Clinicas (USP), the Federal University of Sao Paulo (UNIFESP), Campinas State University (UNICAMP) and Albert Einstein Hospital, contributing 619, 173, 87 and 87 papers, respectively. Nevertheless, notable contributions came from others states, such as Rio de Janeiro, Rio Grande do Sul, Minas Gerais and Parana (Table 6).
Brazilian most-cited articles in general surgery, sorted by the top contributing Institutions.
Institutions | Number of articles published (%) | Number of articles with more than 30 citations (%) | Number of classical articles published (%) |
---|---|---|---|
USP – Hosp Clin SP | 619 (36.1) | 36 (56.2) | 5 (55.5) |
UNIFESP – Escola Paulista | 173 (10.1) | 8 (12.5) | 1 (11.1) |
Hospital Sirio Libanes | 14 (0.8) | 2 (3.1) | 1 (11.1) |
USP Ribeirao Preto | 10 (1.4) | 1 (1.5) | 1 (11.1) |
INCA | 13 (0.7) | 4 (6.2) | 0 |
UFMG | 53 (3.1) | 3 (4.7) | 0 |
UFRJ | 51 (2.9) | 3 (4.7) | 0 |
Santa Casa Porto Alegre - UFCSPA | 30 (1.7) | 3 (4.7) | 0 |
UNICAMP | 87 (5.1) | 2 (3.1) | 0 |
UFRGS | 63 (3.6) | 2 (3.1) | 0 |
Hospital AC Camargo | 55 (3.2) | 1 (1.5) | 0 |
PUCRS | 22 (1.3) | 1 (1.5) | 0 |
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz | 8 (0.4) | 1 (1.5) | 0 |
Hospital Albert Einstein | 87 (5.1) | 0 | 0 |
Gastro Obeso Center | 36 (2.1) | 0 | 0 |
Bonsucesso General Hospital | 30 (1.7) | 0 | 0 |
Univ Est Londrina | 25 (1.4) | 0 | 0 |
UFPR | 13 (0.7) | 0 | 0 |
UERJ | 12 (0.7) | 0 | 0 |
Hospital Beneficiencia Portuguesa | 9 (0.5) | 0 | 0 |
Others/Unknow | 322 (18.7) | 13 (20.3) | 2 (22.2)* |
- Botucatu Unesp and Fugast contributed with 1 classical article each. USP/Hosp Clin SP – Universidade de São Paulo/Hospital de Clinicas; UNIFESP – Universidade Federal de São Paulo; INCA – Instituto Nacional do Câncer; UFMG – Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais; UFRJ – Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro; UFCSPA – Universidade Federal de Ciências da Saúde de Porto Alegre; UNICAMP – Universidade Estadual de Campinas; UFRGS – Universidade Federal do rio Grande do Sul; Hosp AC Camargo – Hospital AC Camargo and Ludwig Institute of Cancer Research; PUC/RS – Pontificia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul; UEL – Universidade Estadual de Londrina; UFPR – Universidade Federal do Paraná; UERJ – Universidade Estadual do Rio de Janeiro.
Eventually, all surgical specialties are dependent on general surgery. General surgery is a discipline encompassing clinical knowledge, operative techniques and scientific foundations, including wound healing, infection, metabolism, immunology, shock and resuscitation.
In this paper, we recognized articles that were published in the most cited general surgery journals, had at least one author with a Brazilian affiliation, were identified in the ISI Web of Knowledge database and were published during a 39-year period (1970 to 2009). In total, 1,713 items were published by Brazilian authors from more than 100 institutions. It is worth mentioning that 555 papers received 5,556 citations during this period. Therefore, 1,158 (67.6%) articles remained uncited. In fact, approximately one half of all published medical articles are never subsequently cited.
A limitation of our results is that we have no information on citations in journals not covered by the ISI bibliometric database. Undoubtedly, the results of this citation analysis could be different if more Latin American scientific journals were listed in the ISI Web of Knowledge or if another citation database, such as SCOPUS, had been selected. Another aspect that must be taken into consideration is that, until recently, only articles published in English were considered by the JCR.
The 26 screened journals were the periodicals dedicated to general surgery with the highest impact factor. These international journals receive contributions from all over the world, publishing milestone publications in experimental and clinical surgery.
Although English is not the native language in Brazil, our country has an established place in the general surgery literature. Nowadays, Brazilian authors have the 19th overall position in terms of the number of papers published in these renowned journals. The contribution of papers from Brazilian authors in these journals is encouraging, as the proportion of the global total increased by about 21-fold, from 0.07% in the 1970s to 1.47% in the 2000s. Nonetheless, Brazil is behind small developing countries, such as Taiwan, and it just recently surmounted Turkey. The overwhelming supremacy of United States was evident, as the United States was the top contributing country in 23 of 26 screened journals, publishing more than 52% of all papers.
In the 2000s, Brazil occupied the 13th overall position. In our point of view, this ascension can be partially attributed to the support of the Brazilian National Council, which is dedicated to promoting science in our country. In addition, more international exchange opportunities, widespread use of the internet and more surgeons dedicated to basic and clinical research could be responsible for the rising curve of publications over the years.9 However, the English language can be a barrier, and other types of biases (bias towards nationality) can influence the approval rate.2 We recognize that the SciELO (Scientific Electronic Library Online) database increased the visibility of Brazilian medical literature during the past decade. The SciELO will probably also contribute to increasing the impact of national journals devoted to surgery.
Specific topics were highlighted in different decades. These data reflect, at least in part, the evolution of a specific surgical area. For example, a better comprehension of the physiology of obesity, transplantation and laser therapy resulted in great amounts of new information and motivated the establishment of new journals. Our study shows that many Brazilian papers are devoted to these topics. Concerning bariatric surgery, Brazilian authors have published continually in journals like Obesity Surgery, where Brazil holds the 3rd overall position.
Various observations can be made regarding the study design of the top articles. We observed a tendency of clinically oriented publications. Only 12 (18.4%) of the top 65 articles presented an experimental design. Although surgeons are conscious of the importance of evidence-based medicine, only 10 (15.3%) articles were randomized clinical trials. Prior studies corroborated these observations in other medical areas, including trauma, general surgery, urology and critical care medicine.5, 10–12
Interestingly, international collaboration and multicenter trials seem to be needed for a paper to be highly cited because 7 of the 9 classics (> 100 citations) have authors from different countries. In the 1980s, 9/71 (12.6%) articles had inter-institutional collaboration. In the 1990s, 32/182 (17.1%) articles published by Brazilian authors had this characteristic, and after 2000, 185 of 1441 (12.8%) articles had international collaboration. Eighteen of the top 30 Brazilian articles were inter-institutional. In the top 65 articles (>30 citations), the United States was the country whose investigators most frequently collaborated with Brazilian authors (18/65; 27.7%).
General surgery is a heterogeneous medical specialty, covering different areas in men and women’s health, basic science, clinical practice and operative techniques. The list of the top-cited articles covers some of the hottest topics in surgery today, such as surgical oncology, minimally invasive approaches and organ transplantation. In the most cited article concerning trauma and critical care, Wade et al. from the University of California and in collaboration with Younes from USP published a meta-analysis demonstrating similar efficacy between hypertonic and isotonic solutions in trauma. Previously, Younes et al. reported a cohort of Memorial Sloan-Kettering patients and analyzed perioperative risk factors and the recurrence of colorectal metastases (4th overall). The same author published the best-ranked Brazilian experimental study concerning the use of hypertonic saline in dogs (positioned 16th). The top article covering organ transplantation was presented by Chocair et al. (USP) and covered the activity of thiopurine methyltransferase in immunosuppressive therapy in renal transplantation. The article ranked first overall and in oncology was published by Cutait et al. (USP - Hospital Sirio Libanes) and was about immunohistology in colorectal cancer.
The oldest article in the list of the top 65 was published in 1979 by Paulino et al. (UFRJ) regarding early gastric cancer. The most recent top 65 article was published by Zorron et al. (RJ) in 2008, describing preliminary results of transvaginal NOTES cholecystectomy.
In the 7th most cited article, Habr-Gama et al. (USP) reviewed the complications of GI endoscopy. The same group addressed the use of radiotherapy and chemotherapy in low rectal cancer (10th) and more recently published two articles reporting the long-term results of operative treatment for rectal cancer following chemotherapy (14th and 60th).
Although our search included the 26 most-cited general surgery journals, we are aware that restricting our search to these journals is a limitation of the present study. Some of the most cited Brazilian papers were published in more specific or general journals; these include the description of the “Jatene procedure” for the correction of transposition of the great arteries, which was published in the Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery in 1976; the use of hypertonic NaCl for the treatment of severe hemorrhagic shock, which was published in the American Journal of Physiology in 1980; and the first description of liver transplantation from a living donor, which was published by Raia et al. in 1989 in the Lancet. These articles have been cited 243, 258 and 262 times, respectively.13–15
This analysis highlighted the academic influence and popularity of southeast institutions. Historically, Sao Paulo institutions provided financial and technological support for research. For decades, the University of Sao Paulo - Hospital de Clinicas has been the top published institution. However, highly contributing institutions are now also based in other states, such as Rio de Janeiro, Rio Grande do Sul, Minas Gerais and Parana.
CONCLUSIONSIn recent years, citation analysis, although imperfect, has become common and is considered to be the currency of journal prestige. The selected journals have always attracted the submission of advances and landmark articles in general surgery. This study is an opportunity to remember the most-cited Brazilian articles and to learn from distinguished Brazilian surgeons, recognizing the remarkable impact that these visionaries have had in national surgery.