Isabelle Boutron

Isabelle Boutron is a professor of epidemiology at the Université Paris Cité[1] and head of the INSERM- METHODS team within the Centre of Research in Epidemiology and Statistics (CRESS). She was originally trained in rheumatology and later switched to a career in epidemiology and public health. She is also deputy director of the French EQUATOR (Enhancing the QUAlity and Transparency Of health Research) Centre, member of the SPIRIT-CONSORT executive committee, director of Cochrane France and co-convenor of the Bias Methods group of the Cochrane Collaboration.

Isabelle Boutron
Born
Strasbourg, France
NationalityFrench
Alma materPierre and Marie Curie University
Occupation(s)Professor, researcher

Biography and education

Boutron graduated from the Pierre and Marie Curie University in rheumatology in 2002 and obtained her PhD in epidemiology in 2006. She was a postdoctoral fellow in the Centre for Statistics in Medicine, University of Oxford from 2008 to 2009, working under Douglas Altman.

After being trained in rheumatology, Boutron was awarded of a fellowship from the French Ministry of Health and a 2-year fellowship from the Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris. With these fellowships, she switched her career focus to epidemiology and public health. She was awarded a PhD in epidemiology in 2006 and became assistant Professor of Epidemiology in the Paris Diderot University in the Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics directed by Dr. Philippe Ravaud. After a postdoctoral position in the University of Oxford, she joined the Paris Descartes University as associate professor (2009-2012) and professor since 2012 at Université Paris Cité.

Scientific activities

Boutron's research activities mainly focus on meta-research, interventional research on research, transparency, the peer-review process, methodological issues of assessing interventions (blinding, external validity, complex interventions) and research synthesis. She has worked on the internal and external validity of non-pharmacological trials, and co-led the extension of the CONSORT statement on reporting treatment trials for nonpharmacologic treatments.[2][3] Along with her colleagues she edited a book entitled “Randomized Clinical Trials of Nonpharmacological Treatments.” She also investigates the distorted dissemination of research finding through publication bias, selective reporting of outcomes and spin defined as a distorted interpretation of research findings. Boutron has demonstrated the high prevalence of such distortion in the published scientific literature[4][5] and shown how the biased presentation, and interpretation of research results may bias the interpretation of readers,[6] which is a critically important aspect of the knowledge translation process. She led an innovative and ambitious joint doctoral training programme funded by Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions, dedicated to Methods in Research on Research (MIROR) in the field of clinical research, She is currently leading the COVID-NMA initiative a living mapping and living evidence synthesis of preventive interventions and treatments for COVID-19.

Boutron has published more than 200 peer-reviewed articles. She is an academic editor for the academic journals BMC Medicine, PLOS Biology, and Cochrane Reviews. She is responsible for the teaching programs in Clinical Epidemiology and Public Health, for medical students at Université Paris Cité, and is co-leader (with Pr. Ravaud) of the international Master 2 program, Comparative Effectiveness Research. She is also deputy director of the Doctoral school of Public Health at université Paris Cité.

Academic awards and honors

  • Award Louis-Daniel Beauperthuy, Académie des sciences (2014)

Personal

Boutron is married to Emmanuel Boutron. She has two children: Antoine born in 1999 and Augustin born in 2003.

References

  1. "Boutron, Isabelle (Prof.)". Université Paris Cité. 2020. Retrieved 10 September 2022.
  2. Boutron, I; Moher, D; Altman, DG; Schulz, KF; Ravaud, P (2008). "Extending the CONSORT statement to randomized trials of nonpharmacologic treatment; explanation and elaboration". Ann Intern Med. 148 (4): 295–309. doi:10.7326/0003-4819-148-4-200802190-00008. PMID 18283207.
  3. Boutron, I; Moher, D; Altman, DG; Schulz, KF; Ravaud, P (2008). "Methods and processes of the CONSORT Group: example of an extension for trials assessing nonpharmacologic treatments". Ann Intern Med. 148 (4): W60–W66. doi:10.7326/0003-4819-148-4-200802190-00008-w1. PMID 18283201.
  4. Boutron, I; Dutton, S; Ravaud, P; Altman, DG (2010). "Reporting and interpretation of randomized controlled trials with statistically nonsignificant results for primary outcomes". JAMA. 303 (20): 2058–2064. doi:10.1001/jama.2010.651. PMID 20501928.
  5. Yavchitz, A; Boutron, I; Bafeta, A; Marroun, I; Charles, P; Mantz, J; Ravaud, P (2012). "Misrepresentation of randomized controlled trials in press releases and news coverage: a cohort study". PLOS Med. 9 (9): e1001308. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.1001308. PMC 3439420. PMID 22984354.
  6. Boutron, I; Altman, DG; Hopewell, S; Vera-Badillo, F; Tannock, I; Ravaud, P (2014). "Impact of spin in the abstract of articles reporting results of randomized controlled trials in the field of cancer: the SPIIN randomized controlled trial". J Clin Oncol. 32 (36): 4120–4126. doi:10.1200/JCO.2014.56.7503. PMID 25403215.
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