The Scientist : NewsBlog Print: Epilepsy paper retracted
The Scientist: NewsBlog:
Epilepsy paper retracted
Posted by Jef Akst
[Entry posted at 2nd September 2009 03:56 PM GMT]

Researchers have retracted a highly-cited 2003 Nature Genetics paper which identified mutations underlying some types of epilepsy after discovering some blatantly erroneous results that negate the study's main finding, they report in the September issue of the journal.

Generic family pedigree
Image: Wikimedia commons,
Armin Kübelbeck
"I think it's appalling, to be perfectly honest," said Massimo Pandolfo of the Hôpital Erasme of the Université Libre de Bruxelles in Belgium, who was not involved in the original publication, but cited the 2003 paper in his own work. "This goes beyond any degree of acceptable mistake."

The 2003 Nature Genetics article, which has been cited 187 times, according to ISI, claimed that four common subtypes of an inherited form of epilepsy were associated with three different mutations in a single gene coding for a chloride-gated ion channel. The work involved analysis of three different families and identified an autosomal dominant pattern of inheritance.

"We thought [the gene] must really have a dominant and strong effect on this [type of] epilepsy," said Holger Lerche of the University of Ulm in Germany, a corresponding author on both the original paper and the reanalysis of the data accompanying the retraction notice in the September issue of Nature Genetics. But after reexamining the data, "this cannot be held as a hypothesis now."

Two of the three pedigrees included several individuals who were marked as having an epileptic disorder, when in reality they had never had a seizure. Furthermore, some of the DNA samples used to identify the mutations appeared to have been used for multiple individuals.

The conflicting information came to the attention of Christian Elger, the head of the Clinic of Epileptology at the University of Bonn, early in 2007, said Vice Dean of Research Markus Nöthen. After confronting Armin Heils, the last author of the original publication and the only author who did not agree to the retraction, with the inconsistent data, Heils agreed to leave the clinic, and the university recruited the help of researchers who had not participated in the original work to re-examine the data and contact the families again for further analysis.

"We really wanted to know in detail what was really correct with the publication because that was a major impact publication," Nöthen said.

In the first family, they found, only three relatives had the mutation (instead of the originally reported five), and of those three, only one had epilepsy (instead of all five known carriers, as originally reported). Additionally, three of the original DNA samples with the mutation had come from just one individual. In the second family, only two individuals (instead of eight) apparently suffered from epilepsy, but because the family did not agree to give another blood sample, mutation carriers could not be identified. In this family, 16 DNA samples appeared to have come from just 10 individuals. (The third pedigree was confirmed as originally reported.)

These inconsistencies may explain why researchers have been unable to replicate the study's results. When geneticist Alexander Zimprich of the Medical University of Vienna in Austria and his colleagues were unable to identify any of these mutations in epileptic patients, he thought the mutations must be very rare. "But now," he said, "it seems to be clear why this thing has not been found in other replication studies" -- it does not have the obvious relationship to epilepsy that was claimed.

Nature Genetics editor-in-chief Myles Axton commended the authors for bringing the error to the public's attention. "This is probably the best example I've seen of authors correcting the record in a thorough way both through their own work and in collaboration with outside experts," he said. "It's just a shame that it took them so long."

Heils did not reply to requests for comment sent to his University of Bonn and personal email addresses.

The blog DrugMonkey, which posted the retraction notice, expressed confusion as to whether it reflected mistakes or misconduct. While no formal investigation of misconduct was conducted, Lerche said that these results are "very difficult to explain by an error that might have occurred."

"If this is just sloppiness, this is unacceptable sloppiness," Pandolfo said.


Related stories:
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    [9th December 2008]
  • Rumblings over Science retractions
    [26th March 2008]
  • Authors retract Science paper
    [26th July 2007]

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    Rating: 4.54/5 (26 votes )





    Science "professionals"
    by anonymous poster

    [Comment posted 2009-09-03 04:06:36]
    I agree with one of the comments speculating about the pressure to publish and the correct statement that "slow is better".
    This problem of not clear or completely wrong data (if not false..) is driving science out from that kind of "independent and clear world" in which it was living until now. Nobody until now was speculating about the scientist as a person, but only as a scientist.
    Now there's this idea of a "professional". Someone like a lawyer or a medical doctor or an financial manager. But we forgot that in the word "professional" are masked many defects which are not appropriate for a scientist: sometimes an exagerate selfevaluation, or a poor evaluation of other's data and results. Bheaviours which are not completely negative for other professionals, but, in my opinion, completely negative for a clear, independent scientist.



    Ironical use of potential plagiarism to illustrate article on potential misconduct
    by John Rodgers

    [Comment posted 2009-09-02 21:21:36]
    The image of a "generic" pedigree used to illustrate this article provides a teaching moment. The image, though it has been placed in the Wikipedia Commons, is actually a nearly 'verbatim' copy of Fig 1 from Fisher et al. 1998 Nature Genetics 18:168. Even the placement of missing data reproduces the original.
    This example of visual plexis (the reuse of text, metaphor, image or idea) fails in my view to exhibit any significant transformation by which an artist could claim ownership of the new work, by which the artist could claim the right to transfer rights to the public domain. The textual equivalent would be a quotation in which the original text in one font is reproduced in another font.
    Wikipedia artists seem in many cases to use the principle that digital re-creation is somehow different from digital reproduction. I suggest this principle is based on a dubious idea. The inclusion in the original source (but not in the propagation by The Scientist) of a reference to Fisher et al. would NOT provide protection from a charge of plagiarism in most academic circles, I suggest. Of course it would also be no protection from a charge of copyright infringement.
    Wikipedia is a very useful resource, but I suggest its users should be very wary of assuming that images found there are actually in the public domain.
    John Rodgers
    jrodgers@bcm.tmc.edu



    Yes, keep 'em coming,
    by anonymous poster

    [Comment posted 2009-09-02 16:33:21]
    Or, rather, more accurately, pseudo-scientists. Something is really wrong or rotten in the modern culture of science, when more and more researchers, some knowingly, submit findings which are of dubious merit for publication. Has the article submission in scientific journals become just a game of who can get away with the best fictions based on sloppy or false data? Alas, creativity in science seems to have earned the same reputation as the creativity in accounting.



    Seizure Disorders
    by anonymous poster

    [Comment posted 2009-09-02 12:59:03]
    As if having a seizure disorder wasn't challenging enough, misinformation and incorrect information complicate the issues. Acknowledging the errors is critical, now what is going to get done to prevent this from happening again?



    Retracted paper
    by anonymous poster

    [Comment posted 2009-09-02 12:53:49]
    I agree about the retraction being a bad indicator of the "get it out there" rush on these disease causing mutations. I have seen quite a few papers in high impact factor journals that i would be embarrassed to take to my PI as my work - yet in my lab we have done a lot of hard work, investigated every angle and are struggling to get things published or have new grants funded.

    The life and complaints of a scientific researcher :)



    Publish or perish, or publish AND perish?
    by anonymous poster

    [Comment posted 2009-09-02 12:31:25]
    I can't help but believe that an error of this magnitude, whether deliberate or not, reflects the culture among science professionals in which so much rides upon being "first" or "breakthrough" or "groundbreaking." The pressure to produce something that radically changes the discipline is so intense, it's producing unethical and/or sloppy research. Faster is not better; we need to reward accuracy and thoroughness above all.



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