Betrán Ana P, Say Lale, Gülmezoglu A Metin, Allen Tomas, Hampson Lynn
UNDP/UNFPA/WHO/World Bank Special Programme of Research, Development and Research Training in Human Reproduction, Department of Reproductive Health and Research, World Health Organization, Geneva, (1211) Switzerland.
BMC Med Res Methodol. 2005 Jan 28;5(1):6. doi: 10.1186/1471-2288-5-6.
Failure to be comprehensive can distort the results of a systematic review. Conversely, extensive searches may yield unmanageable number of citations of which only few may be relevant. Knowledge of usefulness of each source of information may help to tailor search strategies in systematic reviews.
We conducted a systematic review of prevalence/incidence of maternal mortality and morbidities from 1997 to 2002. The search strategy included electronic databases, hand searching, screening of reference lists, congress abstract books, contacting experts active in the field and web sites from less developed countries. We evaluated the effectiveness of each source of data and discuss limitations and implications for future research on this topic.
Electronic databases identified 64098 different citations of which 2093 were included. Additionally 487 citations were included from other sources. MEDLINE had the highest yield identifying about 62% of the included citations. BIOSIS was the most precise with 13.2% of screened citations included. Considering electronic citations alone (2093), almost 20% were identified uniquely by MEDLINE (400), 7.4% uniquely by EMBASE (154), and 5.6% uniquely by LILACS (117). About 60% of the electronic citations included were identified by two or more databases.
This analysis confirms the need for extending the search to other sources beyond well-known electronic databases in systematic reviews of maternal mortality and morbidity prevalence/incidence. These include regional databases such as LILACS and other topic specific sources such as hand searching of relevant journals not indexed in electronic databases. Guidelines for search strategies for prevalence/incidence studies need to be developed.
缺乏全面性可能会歪曲系统评价的结果。相反,广泛的检索可能会产生数量难以管理的文献引用,其中只有少数可能相关。了解每种信息来源的有用性可能有助于在系统评价中调整检索策略。
我们对1997年至2002年孕产妇死亡率和发病率的患病率/发病率进行了系统评价。检索策略包括电子数据库、手工检索、参考文献列表筛选、会议摘要书籍、联系该领域活跃的专家以及来自欠发达国家的网站。我们评估了每种数据来源的有效性,并讨论了局限性以及对该主题未来研究的影响。
电子数据库识别出64098条不同的文献引用,其中2093条被纳入。此外,从其他来源纳入了487条引用。MEDLINE的产出率最高,识别出约62%的纳入引用。BIOSIS最为精确,筛选出的引用中有13.2%被纳入。仅考虑电子引用(2093条),MEDLINE单独识别出近20%(400条),EMBASE单独识别出7.4%(154条),LILACS单独识别出5.6%(117条)。约60%的纳入电子引用由两个或更多数据库识别。
该分析证实,在对孕产妇死亡率和发病率患病率/发病率进行系统评价时,除了知名的电子数据库外,还需要将检索范围扩展到其他来源。这些来源包括区域数据库,如LILACS,以及其他特定主题来源,如手工检索未被电子数据库索引的相关期刊。需要制定患病率/发病率研究的检索策略指南。