MUSM Libraries: Evaluating a SYSTEMATIC REVIEW article

Appraise |  Size of treatment effect | Finding articles


Appraise

What did they do? (Methods)

1. Did the review explicitly address a sensible question?

2. Was the search for relevant studies detailed and exhaustive?

3. Were the primary studies of high methodologic quality?

4. Were the assessments of included studies reproducible?

What was the answer? (Results)

1. What are the overall results of the review?

2. Were the results similar from study to study?

What did they say about the answer? (Conclusion)

1. Do the results of the study support the author/s conclusions?

2. Does the conclusion reflect the discussion?

3. Are there study limitations, and do these impact the conclusions?

4. Are potential discrepancies mentioned?

What do I do with this information?

1. How can I best interpret the results to apply them to the care of patients in my practice?

2. Were all patient important outcomes considered?

3. Are the benefits worth the potential costs and risks?


Size of treatment effect

A systematic review is a concise summary of the best available evidence that addresses a sharply defined clinical question.

A meta-analysis is a systematic review that uses quantitative methods to summarize the results.

The test of homogeneity gauges whether it is reasonable to combine the results of individual studies. It asks if the differences in treatment effect from study to study are greater than one would expect as a result of chance alone.

For meta-analyses of therapy, the results are interpreted as in for articles of therapy:

  Outcome
Yes
Outcome
No
Treated (Y) a b
Control (X) c d

Risk of Outcome: Y = a/(a+b)
Risk of Outcome: X = c/(c+d)

Experimental group size:
Control group size:
Events in experimental group:
Events in control group:

EER
CER
ARR
RRR
NNT
OR/RR

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Finding articles of systematic reviews

PubMed:

Cochrane Library:

References:


From: Guyatt, G. Users' Guides to the Medical Literature: Essentials of Evidence-based Clinical Practice. AMA Press, 2002 and Straus. Evidence-Based Medicine. How to Practice and Teach EBM. Churchill-Livingstone, 3rd edition, 2005 (pocket cards).

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