Dixon Elijah, Hameed Morad, Sutherland Francis, Cook Deborah J, Doig Christopher
Department of Surgery, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Ann Surg. 2005 Mar;241(3):450-9. doi: 10.1097/01.sla.0000154258.30305.df.
To assess the methodologic quality of meta-analyses of general surgery topics published in peer-reviewed journals.
Systematic reviews and meta-analysis are used to seek, summarize, and interpret primary studies on a given topic. Accordingly, systematic reviews and meta-analyses of high-quality primary studies may be the highest level of evidence for issues of prevention and treatment in evidence-based medicine. However, not all published meta-analyses are rigorously performed.
We searched MEDLINE (from January 1, 1997, to September 1, 2002) and reference lists and solicited general surgery specialists to identify relevant meta-analyses. Inclusion criteria were use of meta-analytic methods to pool the results of primary studies in general surgery on issues of diagnosis, causation, prognosis, or treatment. Our search strategies identified 487 potentially relevant articles. After excluding articles based on a priori criteria, 51 meta-analyses fulfilled eligibility criteria. In duplicate and independently, 2 reviewers assessed the quality of these meta-analyses using a 10-item index called the Overview Quality Assessment Questionnaire.
Overall concordance between 2 independent reviewers was good (interobserver agreement 81%, and a kappa of 0.62 (95% CI 0.55-0.69). Of 51 relevant articles, 38 were published in surgical journals. Most studies had major methodologic flaws (median score of 3.3, scale of 1-7). Factors associated with low overall scientific quality included the absence of any prior meta-analyses publications by authors and meta-analyses produced by surgical department members without external collaboration.
This critical appraisal of meta-analyses published in the general surgery literature demonstrates frequent methodologic flaws. The quality of these reports limits the validity of the findings and the inferences that can be made about the primary studies reviewed. To improve the quality of future meta-analyses, we recommend following guidelines for the optimal conduct and reporting of meta-analyses in general surgery.
评估发表于同行评审期刊上的普通外科主题的荟萃分析的方法学质量。
系统评价和荟萃分析用于查找、总结和解释关于某一特定主题的原始研究。因此,高质量原始研究的系统评价和荟萃分析可能是循证医学中预防和治疗问题的最高证据级别。然而,并非所有发表的荟萃分析都经过严格执行。
我们检索了MEDLINE(1997年1月1日至2002年9月1日)及参考文献列表,并向普通外科专家咨询以确定相关的荟萃分析。纳入标准为使用荟萃分析方法汇总普通外科领域关于诊断、病因、预后或治疗问题的原始研究结果。我们的检索策略共识别出487篇潜在相关文章。根据预先设定的标准排除文章后,有51篇荟萃分析符合纳入标准。由两名评审员独立且重复地使用一份名为“综述质量评估问卷”的10项指标对这些荟萃分析的质量进行评估。
两名独立评审员之间的总体一致性良好(观察者间一致性为81%,kappa值为0.62(95%可信区间0.55 - 0.69))。在51篇相关文章中,38篇发表于外科期刊。大多数研究存在主要的方法学缺陷(中位数评分为3.3,评分范围为1 - 7)。与总体科学质量较低相关的因素包括作者此前未发表过任何荟萃分析文章以及由外科部门成员在无外部合作情况下进行的荟萃分析。
对普通外科文献中发表的荟萃分析进行的这项批判性评估表明,方法学缺陷很常见。这些报告质量限制了研究结果的有效性以及对所综述的原始研究得出的推论。为提高未来荟萃分析的质量,我们建议遵循普通外科中荟萃分析的最佳实施和报告指南。