RT Journal Article T1 Does retraction after misconduct have an impact on citations? A pre-post study A1 Candal Pedreira, Cristina A1 Ruano Raviña, Alberto A1 Fernández, Esteve A1 Ramos, Jorge A1 Campos Varela, Isabel A1 Pérez Ríos, Mónica K1 Scientific misconduct K1 Retraction K1 Research integrity AB BackgroundRetracted articles continue to be cited after retraction, and this could have consequences for the scientific community and the general population alike. This study was conducted to analyse the association between retraction and the citations received by papers retracted due to misconduct, using two time frames: (1) a post-retraction period equivalent to the time the article had been in print before retraction, and (2) the total post-retraction period.MethodsThis was a quasi-experimental, pre–post evaluation study. A total of 304 retracted original articles and literature reviews indexed in MEDLINE fulfilled the inclusion criteria. Articles were required to have been published in a MEDLINE-indexed journal between January 2013 and December 2015 and to have been retracted between January 2014 and December 2016. The main outcome was the number of citations received before and after retraction. Results were stratified by journal quartile according to impact factor, and the most cited papers during the pre-retraction period were analysed separately.ResultsThere was an increase in post-retraction citations compared with citations received pre-retraction. However, two exceptions were observed. First, citations received by articles published in first-quartile journals decreased immediately after retraction (p < 0.05), but increased again after some time had elapsed. Second, post-retraction citations decreased significantly for articles that had received a high number of citations prior to retraction (p < 0.05).ConclusionsThe results indicate that article retraction has no association with citations in the long term, as retracted articles continue to be cited, effectively circumventing their retraction PB BMJ Publishing Group SN 2059-7908 YR 2020 FD 2020-11-13 LK https://hdl.handle.net/10347/44627 UL https://hdl.handle.net/10347/44627 LA eng NO Candal-Pedreira C, Ruano-Ravina A, Fernández E, Ramos J, Campos-Varela I, Pérez-Ríos M. Does retraction after misconduct have an impact on citations? A pre-post study. BMJ Global Health. 2020;5(11). DS Minerva RD 25 abr 2026