JBI, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
Amanda Ross-White, Queen's University Library, Queen's University, Kingston, ON, Canada.
JBI Evid Synth. 2021 Aug;19(8):1915-1923. doi: 10.11124/JBIES-21-00138.
A systematic review involves the identification, evaluation, and synthesis of the best-available evidence to provide an answer to a specific question. The "best-available evidence" is, in many cases, a peer-reviewed scientific article published in an academic journal that details the conduct and results of a scientific study. Any potential threat to the validity of these individual studies (and hence the resultant synthesis) must be evaluated and critiqued.In science, the number of predatory journals continue to rise. Studies published in predatory journals may be of lower quality and more likely to be impacted by fraud and error compared to studies published in traditional journals. This poses a threat to the validity of systematic reviews that include these studies and, therefore, the translation of evidence into guidance for policy and practice. Despite the challenges predatory journals present to systematic reviewers, there is currently little guidance regarding how they should be managed.In 2020, a subgroup of the JBI Scientific Committee was formed to investigate this issue. In this overview paper, we introduce predatory journals to systematic reviewers, outline the problems they present and their potential impact on systematic reviews, and provide some alternative strategies for consideration of studies from predatory journals in systematic reviews. Options for systematic reviewers could include excluding all studies from suspected predatory journals, applying additional strategies to forensically examine the results of studies published in suspected predatory journals, setting stringent search limits, and applying analytical techniques (such as subgroup or sensitivity analyses) to investigate the impact of suspected predatory journals in a synthesis.
系统评价涉及到识别、评估和综合最佳现有证据,以回答特定问题。在许多情况下,“最佳现有证据”是发表在学术期刊上的同行评审的科学文章,详细说明了科学研究的实施和结果。任何对这些个体研究的有效性的潜在威胁(因此对综合研究的有效性)都必须进行评估和批判。在科学界,掠夺性期刊的数量继续增加。与发表在传统期刊上的研究相比,发表在掠夺性期刊上的研究可能质量较低,更容易受到欺诈和错误的影响。这对纳入这些研究的系统评价的有效性构成了威胁,因此也对将证据转化为政策和实践指导构成了威胁。尽管掠夺性期刊给系统评价者带来了挑战,但目前几乎没有关于如何管理它们的指导。2020 年,JBI 科学委员会的一个小组成立来调查这个问题。在这篇概述论文中,我们向系统评价者介绍了掠夺性期刊,概述了它们带来的问题及其对系统评价的潜在影响,并提供了一些替代策略,用于考虑系统评价中来自掠夺性期刊的研究。系统评价者的选择可以包括排除所有来自可疑掠夺性期刊的研究,应用额外的策略对发表在可疑掠夺性期刊上的研究结果进行法医检查,设置严格的搜索限制,以及应用分析技术(如亚组或敏感性分析)来调查可疑掠夺性期刊在综合研究中的影响。