A group of researchers in China has lost their paper on liver cancer after the first author admitted to duplication, also known, inelegantly, as self-plagiarism.
The paper, “Glycyrrhetinic acid-modified chitosan nanoparticles enhanced the effect of 5-fluorouracil in murine liver cancer model via regulatory T-cells,” appeared in the July 2013 issue of the Journal of Drug Design, Development and Therapy, a Dove Press title.
According to the abstract: Continue reading “Lack of experience and understanding” forces duplication retractions of liver cancer paper


This one seems like an honest mistake: a paper on dietary supplements during pregnancy has been retracted based on an error in data recording.
After typing up 96 citations, researchers from the 

A missed withdrawal request has led to doubled up publication and a later retraction for Brazilian physicists, through no fault of their own.