BEYOND MEDLINE

Objective: To evaluate the sensitivity and precision of various extended search methods in identifying randomized controlled trials (RCTs) for systematic reviews. Method: Prospective analysis of extended search methods (specialized databases or trial registries, reference lists, hand-searching, pers...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of technology assessment in health care 2003-01, Vol.19 (1), p.168-178
Hauptverfasser: Savoie, Isabelle, Helmer, Diane, Green, Carolyn J., Kazanjian, Arminée
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container_title International journal of technology assessment in health care
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creator Savoie, Isabelle
Helmer, Diane
Green, Carolyn J.
Kazanjian, Arminée
description Objective: To evaluate the sensitivity and precision of various extended search methods in identifying randomized controlled trials (RCTs) for systematic reviews. Method: Prospective analysis of extended search methods (specialized databases or trial registries, reference lists, hand-searching, personal communication, and Internet) used in two systematic reviews of RCTs. The gold standard was the total number of RCTs identified by major databases (MEDLINE, EMBASE, etc.) and extended search strategies combined. Sensitivity was the proportion of all known RCTs identified by any extended search method. Precision reflected the proportion of all items uncovered by any extended search method that actually were RCTs. Results: The extended search identified 94 additional RCTs for the systematic reviews beyond those identified with the major databases. Specialized databases and trial registries had the highest sensitivity and precision for the lipid-lowering project (13.6% and 52.7%, respectively; p < .05) followed by scanning of reference lists (7.2% sensitivity and 41.9% precision; p < .05). Hand-searching was more effective than personal communication and Internet searching (1.7% sensitivity and 12.2% precision; p < .05). The acupuncture project had slightly different results, with the specialized databases and trial registries tied with the review of reference lists for highest sensitivity (14.2%). The precision followed the same trend as the lipid-lowering project (17.6% specialized databases; 8.3% reference lists; p < .05). A post-hoc analysis showed that 75 of the 94 RCTs were indexed in the major databases but missed by the major database search. Conclusions: Extended searching identified additional RCTs for the systematic reviews beyond those found in major databases. Specialized databases and trial registries were most effective. An important number of RCTs were missed by the major database search. Timing and accuracy of indexing may explain this finding. The definitive measure, whether there is an association between the method used to uncover RCTs, the quality of the items uncovered and their impact on systematic review results, is yet to be determined.
doi_str_mv 10.1017/S0266462303000163
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Method: Prospective analysis of extended search methods (specialized databases or trial registries, reference lists, hand-searching, personal communication, and Internet) used in two systematic reviews of RCTs. The gold standard was the total number of RCTs identified by major databases (MEDLINE, EMBASE, etc.) and extended search strategies combined. Sensitivity was the proportion of all known RCTs identified by any extended search method. Precision reflected the proportion of all items uncovered by any extended search method that actually were RCTs. Results: The extended search identified 94 additional RCTs for the systematic reviews beyond those identified with the major databases. Specialized databases and trial registries had the highest sensitivity and precision for the lipid-lowering project (13.6% and 52.7%, respectively; p &lt; .05) followed by scanning of reference lists (7.2% sensitivity and 41.9% precision; p &lt; .05). Hand-searching was more effective than personal communication and Internet searching (1.7% sensitivity and 12.2% precision; p &lt; .05). The acupuncture project had slightly different results, with the specialized databases and trial registries tied with the review of reference lists for highest sensitivity (14.2%). The precision followed the same trend as the lipid-lowering project (17.6% specialized databases; 8.3% reference lists; p &lt; .05). A post-hoc analysis showed that 75 of the 94 RCTs were indexed in the major databases but missed by the major database search. Conclusions: Extended searching identified additional RCTs for the systematic reviews beyond those found in major databases. Specialized databases and trial registries were most effective. An important number of RCTs were missed by the major database search. Timing and accuracy of indexing may explain this finding. 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Hand-searching was more effective than personal communication and Internet searching (1.7% sensitivity and 12.2% precision; p &lt; .05). The acupuncture project had slightly different results, with the specialized databases and trial registries tied with the review of reference lists for highest sensitivity (14.2%). The precision followed the same trend as the lipid-lowering project (17.6% specialized databases; 8.3% reference lists; p &lt; .05). A post-hoc analysis showed that 75 of the 94 RCTs were indexed in the major databases but missed by the major database search. Conclusions: Extended searching identified additional RCTs for the systematic reviews beyond those found in major databases. Specialized databases and trial registries were most effective. An important number of RCTs were missed by the major database search. Timing and accuracy of indexing may explain this finding. 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1471-6348
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subjects GENERAL ESSAYS
Information storage and retrieval
MEDLINE
Randomized controlled trials
Review literature
title BEYOND MEDLINE
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