“…We hypothesized a priori that each of publication year, Journal Impact Factor, Science Citation Index, the inclusion of randomized controlled trials, the inclusion of unpublished studies, the inclusion of studies in languages other than English, the searching of multiple databases, the presence of an author with a degree or affiliation in epidemiology or biostatistics would be positively associated with credibility and completeness of reporting [3,5,28]. Given earlier research that demonstrated industry-funded studies are more likely to describe positive findings and more likely to report subgroup analyses that have lesser credibility, we also included an a priori hypothesis that industry funding could have a negative association [29][30][31][32].…”