AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined the prevalence of differences in eligibility criteria between non-Cochrane systematic reviews (SRs) and their protocols registered on PROSPERO from 2018.
  • A random sample of 100 protocols was analyzed, revealing that 90% of the SRs had discrepancies, with 59 out of 90 changing at least two key components such as participants, interventions, comparators, study design, and outcomes.
  • The most significant variations were found in outcomes (61%), while comparators showed the least change (20%), highlighting the need for greater transparency and better explanation of these changes by authors, PROSPERO, and peer-review processes.

Article Abstract

The author should give careful consideration to the study eligibility criteria of systematic reviews (SRs) and follow it after review protocol development to reduce the possibility of manipulation of inclusion. Our aim was to investigate the prevalence of differences in study eligibility criteria between non-Cochrane SRs and their pre-registered protocols on PROSPERO, and determined what changes were involved as well as whether those changes were explained. We searched the protocols registered on PROSPERO platform in the year of 2018 and then selected these protocols which full-text have been published up to June 9, 2020. A random sample (n = 100) was included. Published full-texts were identified through the protocol's final publication citation. The following five key components of study eligibility criteria were compared: participants, intervention(s)/exposure(s), comparator(s), types of study design, and outcome(s). A total of 90% of included SRs exhibited differences in study eligibility criteria, and 59/90 altered in no less than two key components. Only one SR reported and explained the rationale for changes to the individual key component (the definition of exposure). The "Outcome(s)" exhibited the greatest variation, with changes in 61% of the SRs. The "Comparator(s)/control" exhibited the smallest variation, with changes in 20% of the SRs. Differences in study eligibility criteria between the non-Cochrane SRs and their protocols registered on PROSPERO were widespread but were seldom explained. Authors themselves, PROSPERO platform, as well as peer-review journals and their peer-reviewers should play a role in further improving transparency.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jrsm.1476DOI Listing

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