A pathologist in Chicago has lost five papers for image manipulation and other problems.
The first retraction for Yashpal Kanwar, of the Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern University, appeared in 2013, for a review article published earlier that year in the American Journal of Physiology Renal Physiology. According to the notice:
This review article contains a number of passages that are similar or identical to that of an excellent review by Mélanie Métrich et al. in Pflügers Archiv-European Journal of Physiology 459(4): 535–546, 2010, and to that of other reviews. We also did not reference all of the sources for these passages.
We offer our formal apologies for this error and for any inconvenience assoeiated [sic] with the publication of this article. The paper is therefore being retracted by the American Physiological Society, at the request of Drs. Yang and Sun, with the approval of the other coauthors.
(Praise and euphemism, we’re afraid, don’t wallpaper plagiarism.)
Then, this past June, the Journal of Biological Chemistry removed four more of Kanwar’s articles, including one from 2002 titled “High glucose stimulates synthesis of fibronectin via a novel protein kinase C, Rap1b, and B-Raf signaling pathway.” According to the notice:
This article has been withdrawn by the authors. Fig. 1F was flipped horizontally and reused in Fig. 9D. Fig. 1G was rotated 180 degrees and reused in Fig. 3D. Fig. 2B was flipped horizontally and reused in Fig. 2F. A portion of Fig. 6C was reused in Fig. 6D. Fig. 7A was inappropriately manipulated.
That’s similar, if more extensive, than the notice for another 2002 paper, “Isolation and functional analysis of mouse UbA52 gene and its relevance to diabetic nephropathy”:
This article has been withdrawn by the authors. In Fig. 1, clones 6 and 9 were duplicated.
The citation counts for the five articles range from six to 38, according to Clarivate Analytics’ Web of Science.
Kanwar in an email told us that the work is solid:
JBC informed me regarding the retraction. As far as I know there are no more papers slated for retraction. The conclusions of all the four articles remains unchanged.
Of note: The auto-fill settings on Kanwar’s electronic CV mean his academic highlights now lead with the retractions.
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“ As far as I know there are no more papers slated for retraction.“
Dr. Kanwar may want to take a gander at PubPeer. There’s at least one paper flagged by Dr. Bik which doesn’t appear to have been yet addressed.
https://pubpeer.com/publications/C0CFBEA0892F126192A4F60835105F
And I just reviewed that paper and added another concern. 2 1/2 years and no action by the journal.
Added another paper with a possible concern: https://pubpeer.com/publications/162D86E6CA769F5555C6F10A29EB24. Published after this article was written.
Added another (NIH funded) paper with image concern: https://pubpeer.com/publications/CDD0A9F32720ABB6981075CE5DBE2E
Dr. Bik has added several other papers with questions or concerns to PubPeer. There may be as many as 20 papers now under discussion: https://pubpeer.com/search?q=authors%3A%22+Yashpal+S.+Kanwar%22
This again:
“The conclusions of all the four articles remains unchanged.”
But of course. When you make stuff up, and support it with photoshopped graphics, why would the conclusions change just because your made up evidence was uncovered?
The conclusions remain the same, but we now know the conclusions have no basis in reality.
“Of note: The auto-fill settings on Kanwar’s electronic CV mean his academic highlights now lead with the retractions.”
We need more of this. Auto-fill electronic CVs on every academic departmental website will help expose bad science so the rest of us can move on to reading more grounded research.