4.6 Article

Research Interest and Public Interest in Melanoma: A Bibliometric and Google Trends Analysis

Journal

FRONTIERS IN ONCOLOGY
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2021.629687

Keywords

melanoma; bibliometric analysis; Google Trends; research interest; public interest

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Funding

  1. Peking Union Medical College Hospital

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Over the past few years, research on melanoma has mainly focused on immunotherapy, omics, and the microbiome, while public interest in melanoma has mainly focused on related diseases or manifestations, treatment options, risk factors, diagnostic tools, and prognosis. The study found that the topics revealed by Google Trends and bibliometric analysis were mostly consistent, but there were differences in issues related to melanoma molecular biology.
Introduction Melanoma is a severe skin cancer that metastasizes quickly. Bibliometric analysis can quantify hotspots of research interest. Google Trends can provide information to address public concerns. Methods The top 15 most frequently cited articles on melanoma each year from 2015 to 2019, according to annual citations, were retrieved from the Web of Science database. Original articles, reviews, and research letters were included in this research. For the Google Trends analysis, the topic Melanoma was selected as the keyword. Online search data from 2004 to 2019 were collected. Four countries (New Zealand, Australia, the United States and the United Kingdom) were selected for seasonal analysis. Annual trends in relative search volume and seasonal variation were analyzed, and the top related topics and rising related topics were also selected and analyzed. Results The top 15 most frequently cited articles each year were all original articles that focused on immunotherapy (n=8), omics (n=5), and the microbiome (n=2). The average relative search volume remained relatively stable across the years. The seasonal variation analysis revealed that the peak appeared in summer, and the valley appeared in winter. The diseases associated with or manifestations of melanoma, treatment options, risk factors, diagnostic tools, and prognosis were the topics in which the public was most interested. Most of the topics revealed by bibliometric and Google Trends analyses were consistent, with the exception of issues related to the molecular biology of melanoma. Conclusion This study revealed the trends in research interest and public interest in melanoma, which may pave the way for further research.

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