Time-to-update of systematic reviews relative to the availability of new evidence

Abstract Background A number of methods for deciding when a systematic review should be updated have been proposed, yet little is known about whether systematic reviews are updated more quickly when new evidence becomes available. Our aim was to examine the timing of systematic review updates relati...

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Main Authors: Rabia Bashir, Didi Surian, Adam G. Dunn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-11-01
Series:Systematic Reviews
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13643-018-0856-9
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spelling doaj-a475f648af234599bbd02c925898c7ab2020-11-25T02:21:20ZengBMCSystematic Reviews2046-40532018-11-01711810.1186/s13643-018-0856-9Time-to-update of systematic reviews relative to the availability of new evidenceRabia Bashir0Didi Surian1Adam G. Dunn2Centre for Health Informatics, Australian Institute of Health Innovation, Macquarie UniversityCentre for Health Informatics, Australian Institute of Health Innovation, Macquarie UniversityCentre for Health Informatics, Australian Institute of Health Innovation, Macquarie UniversityAbstract Background A number of methods for deciding when a systematic review should be updated have been proposed, yet little is known about whether systematic reviews are updated more quickly when new evidence becomes available. Our aim was to examine the timing of systematic review updates relative to the availability of new evidence. Methods We performed a retrospective analysis of the update timing of systematic reviews published in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews in 2010 relative to the availability of new trial evidence. We compared the update timing of systematic reviews with and without signals defined by the completion or publication of studies that were included in the updates. Results We found 43% (293/682) systematic reviews were updated before June 2017, of which 204 included an updated primary outcome meta-analysis (median update time 35.4 months; IQR 25.5–54.0), 38% (77/204) added new trials, and 4% (8/204) reported a change in conclusion. In the 171 systematic reviews with reconcilable trial reporting information, we did not find a clear difference in update timing (p = 0.05) between the 15 systematic reviews with a publication signal (median 25.3 months; IQR 15.3–43.5) and the 156 systematic reviews without a publication signal (median 34.4 months; IQR 25.1–52.2). In the 145 systematic reviews with reconcilable trial completion information, we did not find a difference in update timing (p = 0.33) between the 15 systematic reviews with a trial completion signal (median 26.0 months; IQR 19.3–49.5) and the 130 systematic reviews without a trial completion signal (median 32.4 months; IQR 24.1 to 46.0). Conclusion A minority of 2010 Cochrane reviews were updated before June 2017 to incorporate evidence from new primary studies, and very few updates led to a change in conclusion. We did not find clear evidence that updates were undertaken faster when new evidence was made available. New approaches for finding early signals that a systematic review conclusion is at risk of change may be useful in allocated resources to the updating of systematic reviews.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13643-018-0856-9Systematic reviewsUpdating systematic reviewsClinical trial registriesEvidence synthesis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rabia Bashir
Didi Surian
Adam G. Dunn
spellingShingle Rabia Bashir
Didi Surian
Adam G. Dunn
Time-to-update of systematic reviews relative to the availability of new evidence
Systematic Reviews
Systematic reviews
Updating systematic reviews
Clinical trial registries
Evidence synthesis
author_facet Rabia Bashir
Didi Surian
Adam G. Dunn
author_sort Rabia Bashir
title Time-to-update of systematic reviews relative to the availability of new evidence
title_short Time-to-update of systematic reviews relative to the availability of new evidence
title_full Time-to-update of systematic reviews relative to the availability of new evidence
title_fullStr Time-to-update of systematic reviews relative to the availability of new evidence
title_full_unstemmed Time-to-update of systematic reviews relative to the availability of new evidence
title_sort time-to-update of systematic reviews relative to the availability of new evidence
publisher BMC
series Systematic Reviews
issn 2046-4053
publishDate 2018-11-01
description Abstract Background A number of methods for deciding when a systematic review should be updated have been proposed, yet little is known about whether systematic reviews are updated more quickly when new evidence becomes available. Our aim was to examine the timing of systematic review updates relative to the availability of new evidence. Methods We performed a retrospective analysis of the update timing of systematic reviews published in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews in 2010 relative to the availability of new trial evidence. We compared the update timing of systematic reviews with and without signals defined by the completion or publication of studies that were included in the updates. Results We found 43% (293/682) systematic reviews were updated before June 2017, of which 204 included an updated primary outcome meta-analysis (median update time 35.4 months; IQR 25.5–54.0), 38% (77/204) added new trials, and 4% (8/204) reported a change in conclusion. In the 171 systematic reviews with reconcilable trial reporting information, we did not find a clear difference in update timing (p = 0.05) between the 15 systematic reviews with a publication signal (median 25.3 months; IQR 15.3–43.5) and the 156 systematic reviews without a publication signal (median 34.4 months; IQR 25.1–52.2). In the 145 systematic reviews with reconcilable trial completion information, we did not find a difference in update timing (p = 0.33) between the 15 systematic reviews with a trial completion signal (median 26.0 months; IQR 19.3–49.5) and the 130 systematic reviews without a trial completion signal (median 32.4 months; IQR 24.1 to 46.0). Conclusion A minority of 2010 Cochrane reviews were updated before June 2017 to incorporate evidence from new primary studies, and very few updates led to a change in conclusion. We did not find clear evidence that updates were undertaken faster when new evidence was made available. New approaches for finding early signals that a systematic review conclusion is at risk of change may be useful in allocated resources to the updating of systematic reviews.
topic Systematic reviews
Updating systematic reviews
Clinical trial registries
Evidence synthesis
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13643-018-0856-9
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