PLoS ONE (Jan 2024)

Gender disparity between first and senior authors on liver cancer research in the top journals of Gastroenterology and Hepatology.

  • Huiqin Shi,
  • Huan Xu,
  • Shu Huang,
  • Zhenju Tan,
  • Xinyue Ma,
  • Han Zhang,
  • Wei Zhang,
  • Lei Shi,
  • Xiaolin Zhong,
  • Muhan Lü,
  • Xia Chen,
  • Xiaowei Tang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0295648
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 5
p. e0295648

Abstract

Read online

BackgroundGender disparity is pervasive in academic medicine. This study aimed to assess the disparity between men and women with regard to first and senior author positions in primary studies on liver cancer over the last two decades.MethodsWe conducted a review of articles published in high-impact factor journals of the field of Gastroenterology and Hepatology in 2005, 2010, 2015 and 2020. First and senior authors of all ages were considered as the study population. The authors' genders were determined using the online artificial intelligence tool genderize.io (https://genderize.io/). The disparity between men and women authors was assessed using the linear-by-linear association test.Results665 original articles from 10 journals were reviewed. The point prevalence of first women authors was 25.0% compared with 75.0% for men. The point prevalence of senior women authors was 16.3% compared with 83.7% for men. From 2000 to 2020, the proportion of first women authors increased 14.4% to 26.8% compared with 85.6%-73.2% for men (P = 0.009), and the proportion of senior women authors increased from 7.4% to 19.5%, compared with 92.6%-80.5% for men (P = 0.035). The factor independently associated with a reduced representation of women among first authors was the region of author. The factor independently associated with a reduced representation of women among senior authors was the impact factor of journals.ConclusionThe findings indicated a remarkable increase in the proportion of women, both first and senior authors, over the past two decades in the field of liver cancers. However, the representation of women authors in this area is far less than that of men.