Nevill Clareece R, Sharifan Amin, O'Mahony Aoife, Tahir Hadiqa, Robinson Will, Modha Urvi, Kahale Lara A, Khamis Assem M, Akl Elie A, Smith Ellesha A, Sutton Alex J, Freeman Suzanne C, Cooper Nicola J
Department of Population Health Sciences, Biostatistics Research Group, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK; Complex Reviews Synthesis Unit, Universities of Glasgow and Leicester, Glasgow, UK.
Department for Evidence-based Medicine and Evaluation, University for Continuing Education Krems, Krems, Austria.
J Clin Epidemiol. 2025 Jul 23;186:111904. doi: 10.1016/j.jclinepi.2025.111904.
Living systematic reviews (LSRs) are an emerging type of review that continuously updates as new evidence becomes available. A previous methodological survey conducted in 2021 identified and studied all health-based LSRs. Since then, the landscape has changed, including the on-going accumulation of COVID-19 research and availability of automation tools. Furthermore, various methods and guidance exist for conducting LSRs and review authors are often encouraged to explore opportunities to maximize dissemination. We conducted an LSR survey update to describe LSRs in a "post-COVID" era. Our objectives were to summarize the uptake of LSRs, describe their characteristics, including methodological and communicative characteristics, and identify patterns in LSR attributes.
We systematically searched for new LSRs and any updates-including updates from LSRs identified previously-published between May 2021 and March 2023 in any health field. Eligible articles were identified and data extracted and combined with data from the original survey. Outcomes broadly included LSR characteristics and uptake, and methodological and communicative characteristics. Analyses were descriptive and included visualizations to explore distributions, combinations, and any time effects of characteristics.
A total of 549 records across 168 individual LSRs were identified (of which 92 LSRs were newly detected). Although the presence of COVID-19 LSRs dominated in later years, there was an increased uptake in non-COVID-19 LSRs; the former were found to search the evidence and update/publish results more frequently. Where reported, the approach to conducting updates varied considerably, including a wide range of prespecified frequencies and/or triggers. Of the 337 updates, 25.5% reported on ongoing studies, and among LSRs with published results, 58.5% used the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluation system. The proportion of LSRs with a centralized platform for sharing results was higher among (i) those that included updates, (ii) Cochrane reviews, (iii) non-COVID-19 LSRs, and (iv) funded LSRs. Few LSRs included interactive features.
The number of LSRs is growing at an accelerating rate, but this survey illustrates that there are still methodological limitations and challenges that carefully need addressing. Key areas for improvement include more explicit prespecified updating strategies and better use of web-based platforms for disseminating results.
Every year, a huge amount of health-related research is published and it is difficult for busy doctors and health care workers to keep up to date with all of the new evidence. To help with this, the research can be summarized by carrying out a review. This is known as a "systematic review" if it is carefully carried out by two or more researchers. We use systematic reviews to get an accurate and fair summary of all the research available. However, these reviews can take a long time to create and can quickly become out-of-date. There is a new and exciting type of review called a "LSR" which is continually updated with new research evidence as it becomes available. This type of review is hugely important for "high-priority" health questions that need to be put into practice straight away, such as new treatments for COVID-19. As LSRs have become more popular since the COVID-19 pandemic, it is important to understand how LSRs are actually being performed and how well they share their results. In 2021, a group of researchers collected all the health-related LSRs that exist. In March 2023, we aimed to collect any new LSRs since then, and summarize what they look like now. Including LSRs found by the previous group, we found 168 LSRs, where 92 were found since May 2021. There now exist more COVID-19-related LSRs than non-COVID-19-related ones, but both groups are increasing in popularity. How LSRs decided when to "update" their results varied a lot. Non-COVID-19-related LSRs and those that had funding were more likely to use online tools to share their results, but very few used tools to let readers interact with the results. By looking at how LSRs are performed, we have shown that there are still challenges that need more work. Key areas for improvement include creating better ways on deciding when and how these reviews should be updated, and building tools to help researchers summarize the findings in a way that is reliable and easily understandable to everyone involved, including patients.
实时系统评价(LSR)是一种新兴的评价类型,会随着新证据的出现不断更新。2021年进行的一项先前的方法学调查识别并研究了所有基于健康领域的LSR。从那时起,情况发生了变化,包括新冠病毒研究的持续积累以及自动化工具的出现。此外,存在多种进行LSR的方法和指南,并且经常鼓励综述作者探索机会以最大限度地进行传播。我们进行了一次LSR调查更新,以描述“后新冠”时代的LSR。我们的目标是总结LSR的应用情况,描述其特征,包括方法学和传播特征,并识别LSR属性中的模式。
我们系统检索了2021年5月至2023年3月期间在任何健康领域发表的新LSR以及任何更新内容,包括先前识别的LSR的更新。识别出符合条件的文章,提取数据并与原始调查的数据相结合。结果大致包括LSR的特征和应用情况,以及方法学和传播特征。分析采用描述性方法,包括可视化以探索特征的分布、组合以及任何时间效应。
共识别出168个独立LSR中的549条记录(其中新发现92个LSR)。尽管近年来新冠病毒LSR占主导地位,但非新冠病毒LSR的应用有所增加;发现前者更频繁地检索证据并更新/发表结果。在报告的情况下,进行更新的方法差异很大,包括广泛的预先指定的频率和/或触发因素。在337次更新中,25.5%报告了正在进行的研究,在有发表结果的LSR中,58.5%使用了推荐分级、评估、制定与评价系统。在(i)包括更新内容的LSR、(ii)Cochrane综述、(iii)非新冠病毒LSR和(iv)有资助的LSR中,具有集中式结果共享平台的LSR比例更高。很少有LSR包含互动功能。
LSR的数量正在加速增长,但本次调查表明仍存在一些方法学上的局限性和挑战,需要仔细加以解决。改进的关键领域包括更明确的预先指定的更新策略,以及更好地利用基于网络的平台来传播结果。
每年都会发表大量与健康相关的研究,忙碌的医生和医护人员很难跟上所有新证据。为了帮助解决这个问题,可以通过进行综述来总结研究。如果由两名或更多研究人员仔细进行,这被称为“系统评价”。我们使用系统评价来准确公正地总结所有现有研究。然而,这些综述可能需要很长时间来创建,并且可能很快过时。有一种新的、令人兴奋的综述类型称为“LSR”,它会随着新研究证据的出现不断更新。这种类型的综述对于需要立即付诸实践的“高优先级”健康问题非常重要,例如新冠病毒的新治疗方法。自新冠疫情以来,LSR越来越受欢迎,了解LSR实际是如何进行的以及它们如何分享结果很重要。2021年,一组研究人员收集了所有现有的与健康相关的LSR数据。2023年3月,我们旨在收集此后的任何新LSR,并总结它们现在的情况。包括前一组发现的LSR,我们共发现168个LSR,其中92个是2021年5月以后发现的。现在与新冠病毒相关的LSR比与非新冠病毒相关的更多,但两组的受欢迎程度都在增加。LSR决定何时“更新”其结果的方式差异很大。与非新冠病毒相关的LSR和有资金支持的LSR更有可能使用在线工具来分享结果,但很少使用工具让读者与结果进行互动。通过观察LSR的执行方式,我们表明仍然存在需要更多工作的挑战。改进的关键领域包括创建更好的方法来决定这些综述何时以及如何更新,以及构建工具来帮助研究人员以一种可靠且易于包括患者在内的所有相关人员理解的方式总结研究结果。