Impact of Brazilian papers in cardiology and cardiovascular sciences in the last decade

During the last decade, there has been a significant increase in the number of Brazilian publications in cardiology and cardiovascular sciences in important international citation indexing platforms. This occurred in Brazil and in most Latin American countries at approximately 13% per year between 1999 and 2008 according to the study by Colantionio et al.1 This represents nearly 3% of all articles published in international journals indexed in the Web of Science platform, maintained by Thompson-Reuters, and Scopus-Scimago, provided by Elsevier.

During the last decade, there has been a significant increase in the number of Brazilian publications in cardiology and cardiovascular sciences in important international citation indexing platforms. This occurred in Brazil and in most Latin American countries at approximately 13% per year between 1999 and 2008 according to the study by Colantionio et al. 1 This represents nearly 3% of all articles published in international journals indexed in the Web of Science platform, maintained by Thompson-Reuters, and Scopus-Scimago, provided by Elsevier.
Although most of our indexed articles have been published in international journals, the citation indexes achieved by Brazilian and Latin American authors are usually lower than those from countries with higher income or higher Human Development Index. 1 This is even more evident for studies conducted in national institutions in comparison with those developed with some degree of international cooperation.
As compared with international citations, using the data from Scimago country ranking, 2 the mean citation index of Brazilian papers in cardiology has progressively increased from less than 0.5 to nearly 0.65 in the last ten years ( Figure 1). Today, this index is similar to that of countries like Japan, South Korea and China.
Advances in the quality of Brazilian papers in cardiology has occurred along with the improvement of Brazilian researchers' qualification thanks to Master and Doctoral degree programs and incentive programs for scientific research supported by agencies and national medical societies. On the other hand, approximately 35% of Brazilian papers in cardiology or cardiovascular sciences have been published in Arquivos Brasileiros de Cardiology or other Brazilian journals, and less than 50% of papers in journals with an impact factor greater than 1.6.
Previously, we have reported that the citation indexes of studies on major subjects in cardiovascular sciences, such as 'myocardial revascularization' and 'atrial fibrillation' published in Brazilian journals are not different from those of articles published in other countries. 3 Aiming to expand this analysis, we assessed 968 articles in cardiology indexed in the Web of Science, written exclusively by Brazilian authors and published between 2010 and 2014.
We considered the mean citation index of the 30 journals with the highest number of articles published, and assessed correlations between the number of times these articles were cited and the impact factor of the journals in which these articles were published. There was a weak correlation between the mean number of times these papers were cited within two years of publication and the impact factor of the journals, especially in higher impact journals ( Figure 2).
These findings confirm that, despite recent advances, the citation indexes obtained from Brazilian authors are still lower than the mean international index. Besides, they highlight the importance to analyze the citation indexes of each study. These are currently available in the main international citation indexing systems that, in turn, provide an online, daily update of these parameters. For this reason, the 'value' of a publication may not be related to the journal impact. In fact, the citation index of scientific publications has been used by most of Brazilian fostering agencies and the Lattes Platform, a database of Brazilian researchers' resumes.
On the other hand, one of the main ranking criteria of graduate programs in Brazil, used by the Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel (CAPES) of the Ministry of Health, is based on Qualis system. Qualis classifies scientific production of graduate programs according to the impact factors of journals in which the papers are published, without taking into consideration the indexes of each publication. Thus, a revision of this method is required to promote adequate fostering of research and incentive for the publication of Brazilian papers in internationally indexed journals.