Abstract

BackgroundAlthough the methods for conducting systematic reviews of efficacy are well established, there is much less guidance on how systematic reviews of adverse effects should be performed.MethodsIn order to determine where methodological research is most needed to improve systematic reviews of adverse effects of health care interventions, we conducted a descriptive analysis of systematic reviews published between 1994 and 2005. We searched the Database of s of Reviews of Effects (DARE) and The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (CDSR) to identify systematic reviews in which the primary outcome was an adverse effect or effects. We then extracted data on many of the elements of the systematic review process including: types of interventions studied, adverse effects of interest, resources searched, search strategies, data sources included in reviews, quality assessment of primary data, nature of the data analysis, and source of funding.Results256 reviews were included in our analysis, of which the majority evaluated drug interventions and pre-specified the adverse effect or effects of interest. A median of 3 resources were searched for each review and very few reviews (13/256) provided sufficient information to reproduce their search strategies. Although more than three quarters (185/243) of the reviews sought to include data from sources other than randomised controlled trials, fewer than half (106/256) assessed the quality of the studies that were included. Data were pooled quantitatively in most of the reviews (165/256) but heterogeneity was not always considered. Less than half (123/256) of the reviews reported on the source of funding.ConclusionThere is an obvious need to improve the methodology and reporting of systematic reviews of adverse effects. The methodology around identification and quality assessment of primary data is the main concern.

Highlights

  • The methods for conducting systematic reviews of efficacy are well established, there is much less guidance on how systematic reviews of adverse effects should be performed

  • Most of the included reviews were identified from Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects (DARE) with only 11 Cochrane reviews identified from Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (CDSR)

  • The number of reviews focusing on adverse effects is increasing over time but the proportion of these reviews relative to all reviews on DARE has remained between 2% and 8% [see Figure 2]

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Summary

Introduction

The methods for conducting systematic reviews of efficacy are well established, there is much less guidance on how systematic reviews of adverse effects should be performed. While the assessment of adverse effects in systematic reviews of health care interventions is undoubtedly essential, there are significant methodological challenges in undertaking such reviews [1,2]. Some guidance is available from The Cochrane Collaboration [3] but the lack of (page number not for citation purposes). BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006, 6:3 http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2288/6/3. Title and abstracts identified and screened, n = 3635 Full copies ordered and received, n=298. Publications meeting the inclusion criteria and included in the review, n = 257. N=41 Prevention of adverse effect, n =1 Adverse effect is secondary outcome, n=18

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