Reporting and misreporting of sex differences in the biological sciences

Y Garcia-Sifuentes, DL Maney - Elife, 2021 - elifesciences.org
Elife, 2021elifesciences.org
As part of an initiative to improve rigor and reproducibility in biomedical research, the US
National Institutes of Health now requires the consideration of sex as a biological variable in
preclinical studies. This new policy has been interpreted by some as a call to compare
males and females with each other. Researchers testing for sex differences may not be
trained to do so, however, increasing risk for misinterpretation of results. Using a list of
recently published articles curated by Woitowich et al.(eLife, 2020; 9: e56344), we examined …
Abstract
As part of an initiative to improve rigor and reproducibility in biomedical research, the US National Institutes of Health now requires the consideration of sex as a biological variable in preclinical studies. This new policy has been interpreted by some as a call to compare males and females with each other. Researchers testing for sex differences may not be trained to do so, however, increasing risk for misinterpretation of results. Using a list of recently published articles curated by Woitowich et al.(eLife, 2020; 9: e56344), we examined reports of sex differences and non-differences across nine biological disciplines. Sex differences were claimed in the majority of the 147 articles we analyzed; however, statistical evidence supporting those differences was often missing. For example, when a sex-specific effect of a manipulation was claimed, authors usually had not tested statistically whether females and males responded differently. Thus, sex-specific effects may be over-reported. In contrast, we also encountered practices that could mask sex differences, such as pooling the sexes without first testing for a difference. Our findings support the need for continuing efforts to train researchers how to test for and report sex differences in order to promote rigor and reproducibility in biomedical research.
eLife