Important Note

Ownership of the journal Cancer Detection and Prevention was transferred to Elsevier Ltd. in September 2008. This page remains available for historical purposes. The content on this page is likely to be out of date and may no longer be accurate.

Important Note

Ownership of the journal Cancer Detection and Prevention was transferred to Elsevier Ltd. in September 2008. This page remains available for historical purposes. The content on this page is likely to be out of date and may no longer be accurate.

Predictive Oncology & Intervention Strategies
Molecular Basis of Oncogenesis & Cancer Control
February 7 - 10, 2004Hotel WestminsterNice, France
 

Evidence-based retrieval in evidence-based medicine

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Summary

Objective: Clinical decisions based on a meta-analysis that is based on an ineffective retrieval strategy may have serious negative consequences for patients. The study objective was to investigate the extent to which meta-analyses report proof of their retrieval strategies’ effectiveness.

Methods: The authors examined a random sample (n 5 100) of articles in the 1996 to 2002 full-text subset of Ovid MEDLINE indexed as ‘‘meta-analysis.’’ We classified the articles in three ways: the article (A) reported both a retrieval strategy in sufficient detail (such that it could be repeated) and with evidence of the strategy’s effectiveness, (B) reported a retrieval strategy in sufficient detail but not with evidence of the strategy’s effectiveness, or (C) neither reported a strategy in detail nor evidence of the strategy’s effectiveness. Articles classified as (A) were further classified according to the level of evidence reported.

Results: Of the eighty-nine articles in our final analysis, six (6.7%) were classified as category (A), fifty-seven (64%) as (B), and twenty-six (29%) as (C). Articles in category (A) reported a previously validated search, a published strategy, or strategy based on expert opinion.

Conclusion: Peer-review standards must be developed that require authors of meta-analyses to report evidence for the effectiveness of their retrieval strategies.