Targeted literature searches are a fundamental part of writing clinical manuscripts that will meet the standards of high-quality journals and contribute meaningfully to evidence-based practice. When physicians write clinical manuscripts, utilizing a targeted literature search can identify high-quality, relevant, and current evidence. While a general literature review is useful, a targeted literature search is specific to the clinical question and should be completed through frameworks established, such as PICO (Population, Intervention, Comparator, Outcome) and PRISMA [1].
Table of Content
1. Perseverance
2. Understanding the Purpose of Reviewer Feedback
3. Classifying Reviewer Comments: Major vs. Minor Revisions
4. Developing a Point-by-Point Response Plan
5. Balancing Acceptance, Clarification, and Rebuttal
6. Documenting Changes in the Revised Manuscript
7. Ensuring Professional Tone and Constructive Engagement
8. Conclusion
The peer review process is central to the academic manuscript revision journey. Peer review ensures research is validated, accurate, and innovative. However, when you receive the reviewer feedback, it can be stressful and disconcerting to receive constructive criticism and requests for revisions. Taking a systematic and professional approach to responding not only has the potential to strengthen the manuscript, but it may also improve the overall response to your manuscript. [1]
Responding to reviewer feedback can be a process that requires tenacity. Authors should recognize that responding to reviewer comments is an opportunity to improve their work, not a condemnation of their ability. [2]
Important considerations:
Although it can be tiresome to tackle every reviewer comment and concern, providing an answer to each one of them is very important, and it shows the reviewer you respect their opinion. Lastly, as an author, you must guarantee yourself that the peer review process has helped you provide a revised manuscript of much higher quality than the original submission. Also, the readers of your manuscripts need to go through the task of answering reviewer comments and revising the studies for that. [3]
A reviewer will also provide comments that relate to their role as a: [4]
Understanding these purposes can help authors tailor their revisions to journal expectations and scientific integrity.
Not all comments carry equal weight. Sorting them helps prioritize responses.
| Type of Comment | Examples | Response Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Major Revisions | Methodological flaws, missing data analysis, unclear research questions, need for additional experiments | Address thoroughly, provide new analysis or explanation, acknowledge limitations if correction is not feasible |
| Minor Revisions | Language edits, formatting, citation style, and figure clarity | Correct promptly and acknowledge changes clearly |
| Tip: Start with major revisions before moving to minor edits. | ||
A point-by-point response letter is critical. You need to consider each comment in the same order and structure.
Example:
Guidelines for creating a rebuttal are:
Transparency is vital. Reviewers should be able to trace changes easily. [5]
Best practices:
The reply letter displays the author’s professionalism. Even if feedback is harsh, the reply letter must maintain polite and academic language.
| DO’s | DON’Ts |
|---|---|
Thank reviewers and editors.
|
Use defensive or emotionally charged language.
|
The process of replying to reviewer comments requires patience, planning, and professionalism. By categorizing comments, developing point-by-point responses, and documenting revision changes, authors maximize the quality of the manuscript and the chances for publication. In the end, constructive engagement with reviewers is simply part of the process of enhancing scientific communication.
How to Respond to Reviewer Comments and Revise Your Research Paper? Our Pubrica consultants are here to guide you. [Get Expert Publishing Support] or [Schedule a Free Consultation]