TY - JOUR
T1 - Evaluation of the quality of prognosis studies in systematic reviews
AU - Hayden, Jill A.
AU - Côté, Pierre
AU - Bombardier, Claire
PY - 2006/3/21
Y1 - 2006/3/21
N2 - Background: To provide valid assessments of answers to prognostic questions, systematic reviews must appraise the quality of the available evidence. However, no standard quality assessment method is currently available. Purpose: To appraise how authors assess the quality of individual studies in systematic reviews about prognosis and to propose recommendations for these quality assessments. Data Sources: English-language publications listed in MEDLINE from 1966 to October 2005 and review of cited references. Study Selection: 163 systematic reviews about prognosis that included assessments of the quality of studies. Data Extraction: A total of 882 distinct quality items were extracted from the assessments that were reported in the various reviews. Using an iterative process, 2 independent reviewers grouped the items into 25 domains. The authors then specifically identified domains necessary to assess potential biases of studies and evaluated how often those domains had been addressed in each review. Data Synthesis: Fourteen of the domains addressed 6 sources of bias related to study participation, study attrition, measurement of prognostic factors, measurement of and controlling for confounding variables, measurement of outcomes, and analysis approaches. Reviews assessed a median of 2 of the 6 potential biases; only 2 (1%) included criteria aimed at appraising all potential sources of bias. Few reviews adequately assessed the impact of confounding (12%), although more than half (59%) appraised the methods used to measure the prognostic factors of interest. Limitations: Reviews may have been missed by the search or misclassified because of incomplete reporting. Validity and reliability testing of the authors' recommendations are required. Conclusions: Quality appraisal, a necessary step in systematic reviews, is incomplete in most reviews of prognosis studies. Adequate quality assessment should include judgments about 6 areas of potential study biases. Authors should incorporate these quality assessments into their synthesis of evidence about prognosis.
AB - Background: To provide valid assessments of answers to prognostic questions, systematic reviews must appraise the quality of the available evidence. However, no standard quality assessment method is currently available. Purpose: To appraise how authors assess the quality of individual studies in systematic reviews about prognosis and to propose recommendations for these quality assessments. Data Sources: English-language publications listed in MEDLINE from 1966 to October 2005 and review of cited references. Study Selection: 163 systematic reviews about prognosis that included assessments of the quality of studies. Data Extraction: A total of 882 distinct quality items were extracted from the assessments that were reported in the various reviews. Using an iterative process, 2 independent reviewers grouped the items into 25 domains. The authors then specifically identified domains necessary to assess potential biases of studies and evaluated how often those domains had been addressed in each review. Data Synthesis: Fourteen of the domains addressed 6 sources of bias related to study participation, study attrition, measurement of prognostic factors, measurement of and controlling for confounding variables, measurement of outcomes, and analysis approaches. Reviews assessed a median of 2 of the 6 potential biases; only 2 (1%) included criteria aimed at appraising all potential sources of bias. Few reviews adequately assessed the impact of confounding (12%), although more than half (59%) appraised the methods used to measure the prognostic factors of interest. Limitations: Reviews may have been missed by the search or misclassified because of incomplete reporting. Validity and reliability testing of the authors' recommendations are required. Conclusions: Quality appraisal, a necessary step in systematic reviews, is incomplete in most reviews of prognosis studies. Adequate quality assessment should include judgments about 6 areas of potential study biases. Authors should incorporate these quality assessments into their synthesis of evidence about prognosis.
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U2 - 10.7326/0003-4819-144-6-200603210-00010
DO - 10.7326/0003-4819-144-6-200603210-00010
M3 - Article
C2 - 16549855
AN - SCOPUS:33645642434
SN - 0003-4819
VL - 144
SP - 427
EP - 437
JO - Annals of Internal Medicine
JF - Annals of Internal Medicine
IS - 6
ER -