1. Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses: the PRISMA statement
- Author
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Moher, D., Liberati, A., Tetzlaff, J., Altman, D. G., Altman, D., Antes, G., Atkins, D., Barbour, V., Barrowman, N., Berlin, J. A., Clark, J., Clarke, M., Cook, D., D Amico, R., Jonathan Deeks, Devereaux, P. J., Dickersin, K., Egger, M., Ernst, E., Gøtzsche, P. C., Grimshaw, J., Guyatt, G., Higgins, J., Ioannidis, J. P. A., Kleijnen, J., Lang, T., Magrini, N., Mcnamee, D., Moja, L., Mulrow, C., Napoli, M., Oxman, A., Pham, B., Rennie, D., Sampson, M., Schulz, K. F., Shekelle, P. G., Tovey, D., and Tugwell, P.
- Subjects
Epidemiology ,Cost effectiveness ,Applied psychology ,lcsh:Medicine ,Review ,Cochrane Library ,law.invention ,Guidelines and Guidance ,Centre for Reviews and Dissemination ,0302 clinical medicine ,law ,Health care ,Forest plot ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Meta-Analysis as Topic ,media_common ,General Environmental Science ,General Engineering ,Evaluating health interventions ,General Medicine ,3. Good health ,Systematic review ,Research Design ,Meta-analysis ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Evidence-Based Practice ,Periodicals as Topic ,Quality Control ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Funnel plot ,Improving quality ,Evidence-based practice ,Systematic Reviews ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Quality reporting ,MEDLINE ,Guidelines ,03 medical and health sciences ,Terminology as Topic ,Internal Medicine ,Research Methods & Reporting ,Humans ,Meta-regression ,Quality (business) ,Publishing ,Medical education ,Evidence-Based Healthcare ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,Publication bias ,Evidence-based medicine ,Guideline ,Systematic reviews ,Reporting guidelines ,Clinical Trials (Epidemiology) ,Review Literature as Topic ,Family medicine ,Meta-analyses ,CLARITY ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Surgery ,Meta Analyses ,business ,Publication Bias ,Strengths and weaknesses ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Systematic reviews and meta-analyses have become increasingly important in health care. Clinicians read them to keep up to date with their field,1,2 and they are often used as a starting point for developing clinical practice guidelines. Granting agencies may require a systematic review to ensure there is justification for further research,3 and some health care journals are moving in this direction.4 As with all research, the value of a systematic review depends on what was done, what was found, and the clarity of reporting. As with other publications, the reporting quality of systematic reviews varies, limiting readers' ability to assess the strengths and weaknesses of those reviews. Several early studies evaluated the quality of review reports. In 1987, Mulrow examined 50 review articles published in 4 leading medical journals in 1985 and 1986 and found that none met all 8 explicit scientific criteria, such as a quality assessment of included studies.5 In 1987, Sacks and colleagues6 evaluated the adequacy of reporting of 83 meta-analyses on 23 characteristics in 6 domains. Reporting was generally poor; between 1 and 14 characteristics were adequately reported (mean = 7.7; standard deviation = 2.7). A 1996 update of this study found little improvement.7 In 1996, to address the suboptimal reporting of meta-analyses, an international group developed a guidance called the QUOROM Statement (QUality Of Reporting Of Meta-analyses), which focused on the reporting of meta-analyses of randomized controlled trials.8 In this article, we summarize a revision of these guidelines, renamed PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses), which have been updated to address several conceptual and practical advances in the science of systematic reviews (Box 1). Box 1 Conceptual issues in the evolution from QUOROM to PRISMA
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- 2016