Abstract

BackgroundThe use of systematic review methods are widely recognized to be essential in the development of recommendations in clinical practice guidelines to prove their trustworthiness. The objective of this study was to assess the use of systematic search methods by authors of guidelines published in the oncology field.MethodsWe analyzed 590 guidance documents identified in PubMed, NGC, GIN and web sites for guidelines in 2009–2015 in oncology. The main outcome measure used was incidence of guidance documents supported by a systematic search of the literature. In addition to descriptive analyses, logistic regression was used to evaluate if adequate search methods were explained by guideline characteristics.ResultsOf 590 guidance documents included in the study, 305 (51.7%) declared the use of systematic search methods but only 168 (28.5%) applied methods meeting minimum standards for quality and provided sufficient details to allow classification. 164 (27.8%) guidance documents did not report any use of literature evaluation.Guidance documents produced by a Government Agency in North America (OR 2.16, 95% CI 1.16–4.17) and those with a focused scope (OR 2.35, 95% CI 0.97–5.56) were positively associated with the use of systematic search methods. We found no association between the year of publication and use of systematic search methods.ConclusionsA relatively small number of guidance documents was informed by scientific evidence identified through adequate systematic search methods. We observed substantial room for improvement of applied methods and reporting, especially in documents with a broad focus, or those produced by professional societies or independent expert panels in other continents than North America.

Highlights

  • The use of systematic review methods are widely recognized to be essential in the development of recommendations in clinical practice guidelines to prove their trustworthiness

  • Selection of guidelines Overall, of 6330 titles and abstract retrieved from the databases and websites searches, 1065 reports were identified as potentially eligible

  • The number of guidelines increased during the years and their scope was focused in 346/590 (58.6%)

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Summary

Introduction

The use of systematic review methods are widely recognized to be essential in the development of recommendations in clinical practice guidelines to prove their trustworthiness. Clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) are defined by Institute of Medicine (IOM) as statements that include recommendation intended to optimize patient care. They are informed by a systematic review of evidence and assessment of the benefit and harms of alternative care options [1]. According to the Cochrane collaboration handbook “A systematic review attempts to collate all empirical evidence that fits pre-specified eligibility criteria in order to answer a specific research question It uses explicit, systematic methods that are selected with a view to minimizing bias, providing more reliable findings from which conclusions can be drawn and decisions made.” [2,3,4]. Clinicians should consider whether recommendations in a guideline are Trevisiol et al BMC Medical Research Methodology (2019) 19:180 relevant to their practice only after having verified that the guideline has been prepared according to proper methodological requirements

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