Quality of systematic reviews in African emergency medicine: a cross-sectional methodological study

IF 1.4 4区 医学 Q3 EMERGENCY MEDICINE African Journal of Emergency Medicine Pub Date : 2023-11-24 DOI:10.1016/j.afjem.2023.10.001
J. van Niekerk, T. Fapohunda, A. Rohwer, M. McCaul
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Abstract

Introduction

Reliable systematic reviews are essential to inform clinical practice guidelines, policies and further research priorities in Africa. For systematic review findings to be trustworthy, they need to be conducted with methodological rigour and reported transparently. We assessed the methodological quality of systematic reviews published in African emergency medicine journals, comparing them to those published in international emergency medicine journals. Additionally, we describe the types of review literature published in the African journals.

Methods

We performed a cross-sectional methodological study of systematic reviews published in selected African and international emergency medicine journals from 2012 to 2021. Studies were eligible if they were i) a systematic review on an emergency medicine topic, ii) published in one of the top five emergency medicine journals in the African region or internationally and iii) published between January 2012 and December 2021 in English or French. We searched PubMed, Web of Science and Scopus databases and hand-searched selected journals. Two authors screened titles, abstracts and full texts independently and in duplicate. Data extraction was performed by one reviewer, using a standardised form, after completing a calibration exercise. We described the characteristics of systematic reviews and assessed methodological quality using AMSTAR II.

Results

We identified 34 (37%) African and 511 (54%) international systematic reviews from 92 and 948 review articles respectively across 10 journals. We included all 34 African and a random sample of 100 international systematic reviews. Methodological quality was low or critically low for all the African systematic reviews (n=34, 100%) and all but three international systematic reviews (n=97, 97%). The median number of critical domain weaknesses was 4 (IQR 4;5) and 2 (IQR 2;4) for African and international systematic reviews respectively. The most common weaknesses across both African and international systematic reviews were i) not establishing a priori review protocols, ii) unclear selection of study designs iii) not providing a list of excluded studies and iv) unclear reporting on funding sources for included studies.

Conclusion

Emergency medicine systematic reviews published in African and international journals are lacking in methodological quality. Reporting an a priori protocol, developing a comprehensive search strategy, appropriate evidence synthesis and adequate assessment of risk of bias, heterogeneity and evidence certainty may improve the quality of systematic reviews.

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非洲急诊医学系统评价的质量:横断面方法学研究
可靠的系统评价对于为非洲的临床实践指南、政策和进一步的研究重点提供信息至关重要。为了使系统审查的结果值得信赖,它们需要以严谨的方法进行,并透明地报告。我们评估了发表在非洲急诊医学期刊上的系统综述的方法学质量,并将它们与发表在国际急诊医学期刊上的综述进行了比较。此外,我们还描述了发表在非洲期刊上的综述文献的类型。方法:我们对2012年至2021年在选定的非洲和国际急诊医学期刊上发表的系统综述进行了横断面方法学研究。符合条件的研究必须是:(1)关于急诊医学主题的系统评价,(2)发表在非洲区域或国际五大急诊医学期刊之一上,以及(3)在2012年1月至2021年12月期间以英文或法文发表。我们检索了PubMed、Web of Science和Scopus数据库,并手工检索了选定的期刊。两位作者独立筛选标题、摘要和全文,一式两份。数据提取由一名审稿人在完成校准练习后使用标准化表格进行。我们描述了系统评价的特点,并使用AMSTAR II评估了方法学质量。结果我们从10个期刊的92篇和948篇综述文章中分别鉴定出34篇(37%)非洲系统综述和511篇(54%)国际系统综述。我们纳入了所有34个非洲和100个国际系统评价的随机样本。所有非洲系统评价(n=34, 100%)和除3项国际系统评价(n=97, 97%)之外的所有系统评价(n=97, 97%)的方法学质量都较低或极低。在非洲和国际系统评价中,关键领域弱点的中位数分别为4 (IQR 4;5)和2 (IQR 2;4)。非洲和国际系统评价中最常见的弱点是:1)没有建立先验的评价方案;2)研究设计的选择不明确;3)没有提供排除研究的清单;4)纳入研究的资金来源报告不明确。结论在非洲和国际期刊上发表的急诊医学系统综述存在方法学质量不足的问题。报告先验方案、制定全面的检索策略、适当的证据合成和对偏倚风险、异质性和证据确定性的充分评估可以提高系统评价的质量。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
7.70%
发文量
78
审稿时长
85 days
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