Digital health technology implementation has grown rapidly in recent years. To standardize the quality of digital health implementation research and increase the transparency and integrity of reporting, Perrin published iCHECK-DH: guidelines and checklist for the reporting on digital health implementations in 2023. This article interprets the contents of the list with a view to improving the reporting quality of digital implementation studies to develop more effective digital health interventions and achieve better health outcomes.
To enhance the quality and transparency of oncology real-world evidence studies, the European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) has developed the first specific reporting guidelines for oncology RWE studies in peer-reviewed journals ‘the ESMO Guidance for Reporting Oncology Real-World Evidence (GROW)’. To facilitate readers understanding and application of these reporting standards, this article introduces and interprets the development process and main content of the ESMO-GROW checklist.
Transparent reporting of randomized trials is essential to facilitate critical appraisal and interpretation of results. Factorial trials, in which two or more interventions are assessed in the same set of participants, have unique methodological considerations. However, reporting of factorial trials is suboptimal. A consensus-based extension to the consolidated standards of reporting trials (CONSORT) 2010 statement for factorial trials was developed based on the enhancing the quality and transparency of health research (EQUATOR) methodological framework. In the study, we introduced and interpreted the extension of the CONSORT 2010 statement for factorial design in which 16 items were modified and one new item was added and presented an example of a factorial trial in mental health to provide guidance on the reporting of factorial randomized trials.