The optimal approach for retrieving systematic reviews was achieved when searching MEDLINE and Epistemonikos in addition to reference checking: a methodological validation study.

IF 3.9 3区 医学 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES BMC Medical Research Methodology Pub Date : 2024-11-09 DOI:10.1186/s12874-024-02384-2
Lena Heinen, Käthe Goossen, Carole Lunny, Julian Hirt, Livia Puljak, Dawid Pieper
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Abstract

Background: Systematic reviews (SRs) are used to inform clinical practice guidelines and healthcare decision making by synthesising the results of primary studies. Efficiently retrieving as many relevant SRs as possible is challenging with a minimum number of databases, as there is currently no guidance on how to do this optimally. In a previous study, we determined which individual databases contain the most SRs, and which combination of databases retrieved the most SRs. In this study, we aimed to validate those previous results by using a different, larger, and more recent set of SRs.

Methods: We obtained a set of 100 Overviews of Reviews that included a total of 2276 SRs. SR inclusion was assessed in MEDLINE, Embase, and Epistemonikos. The mean inclusion rates (% of included SRs) and corresponding 95% confidence intervals were calculated for each database individually, as well as for combinations of MEDLINE with each other database and reference checking. Features of SRs not identified by the best database combination were reviewed qualitatively.

Results: Inclusion rates of SRs were similar in all three databases (mean inclusion rates in % with 95% confidence intervals: 94.3 [93.9-94.8] for MEDLINE, 94.4 [94.0-94.9] for Embase, and 94.4 [93.9-94.9] for Epistemonikos). Adding reference checking to MEDLINE increased the inclusion rate to 95.5 [95.1-96.0]. The best combination of two databases plus reference checking consisted of MEDLINE and Epistemonikos (98.1 [97.7-98.5]). Among the 44/2276 SRs not identified by this combination, 34 were published in journals from China, four were other journal publications, three were health agency reports, two were dissertations, and one was a preprint. When discounting the journal publications from China, the SR inclusion rate in the recommended combination (MEDLINE, Epistemonikos and reference checking) was even higher than in the previous study (99.6 vs. 99.2%).

Conclusions: A combination of databases and reference checking was the best approach to searching for biomedical SRs. MEDLINE and Epistemonikos, complemented by checking the references of the included studies, was the most efficient and produced the highest recall. However, our results point to the presence of geographical bias, because some publications in journals from China were not identified.

Study registration: https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/R5EAS (Open Science Framework).

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检索系统综述的最佳方法是在检索 MEDLINE 和 Epistemonikos 的同时进行参考文献核对:一项方法论验证研究。
背景:系统综述(SR)通过综合主要研究的结果,为临床实践指南和医疗决策提供信息。在数据库数量有限的情况下,高效检索尽可能多的相关综述具有挑战性,因为目前还没有关于如何优化检索的指导。在之前的一项研究中,我们确定了哪些单个数据库包含的SR最多,以及哪些数据库组合检索到的SR最多。在本研究中,我们旨在通过使用不同的、更大的、更新近的 SR 集来验证之前的结果:方法:我们获得了一组 100 篇综述,共包含 2276 篇参考文献。我们在 MEDLINE、Embase 和 Epistemonikos 中评估了 SR 的纳入情况。计算了每个数据库的平均收录率(收录SR的百分比)和相应的95%置信区间,以及MEDLINE与其他数据库和参考文献检查的组合。对最佳数据库组合未识别出的文献综述的特征进行了定性审查:所有三个数据库的SR纳入率相似(平均纳入率(%)和95%置信区间:MEDLINE为94.3 [93.9-94.8],Embase为94.4 [94.0-94.9],Epistemonikos为94.4 [93.9-94.9])。在 MEDLINE 中加入参考文献检查后,纳入率提高到 95.5 [95.1-96.0]。MEDLINE 和 Epistemonikos 是两个数据库加参考文献检查的最佳组合(98.1 [97.7-98.5])。在 44/2276 篇参考文献中,有 34 篇未被此组合识别,其中 34 篇发表在中国期刊上,4 篇为其他期刊出版物,3 篇为卫生机构报告,2 篇为学位论文,1 篇为预印本。如果不考虑中国的期刊出版物,推荐的组合(MEDLINE、Epistemonikos 和参考文献检查)的SR收录率甚至高于之前的研究(99.6% 对 99.2%):结论:数据库和参考文献核对相结合是检索生物医学 SR 的最佳方法。MEDLINE和Epistemonikos,再加上对收录研究的参考文献进行核对,是最有效的方法,检索率也最高。不过,我们的研究结果表明存在地域偏差,因为一些发表在中国期刊上的论文没有被发现。研究注册:https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/R5EAS(开放科学框架)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
BMC Medical Research Methodology
BMC Medical Research Methodology 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
2.50%
发文量
298
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: BMC Medical Research Methodology is an open access journal publishing original peer-reviewed research articles in methodological approaches to healthcare research. Articles on the methodology of epidemiological research, clinical trials and meta-analysis/systematic review are particularly encouraged, as are empirical studies of the associations between choice of methodology and study outcomes. BMC Medical Research Methodology does not aim to publish articles describing scientific methods or techniques: these should be directed to the BMC journal covering the relevant biomedical subject area.
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