| Literature DB >> 29216930 |
Reint Meursinge Reynders1,2, Luisa Ladu3, Nicola Di Girolamo4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Synthesizing outcomes of underreported primary studies can pose a serious threat to the validity of outcomes and conclusions of systematic reviews. To address this problem, the Cochrane Collaboration recommends reviewers to contact authors of eligible primary studies to obtain additional information on poorly reported items. In this protocol, we present a cross-sectional study and a survey to assess (1) how reviewers of new Cochrane intervention reviews report on procedures and outcomes of contacting of authors of primary studies to obtain additional data, (2) how authors reply, and (3) the consequences of these additional data on the outcomes and quality scores in the review. All research questions and methods were pilot tested on 2 months of Cochrane reviews and were subsequently fine-tuned. METHODS FOR THE CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDY: Eligibility criteria are (1) all new (not-updates) Cochrane intervention reviews published in 2016, (2) reviews that included one or more primary studies, and (3) eligible interventions refer to contacting of authors of the eligible primary studies included in the review to obtain additional research data (e.g., information on unreported or missing data, individual patient data, research methods, and bias issues). Searching for eligible reviews and data extraction will be conducted by two authors independently. The cross-sectional study will primarily focus on how contacting of authors is conducted and reported, how contacted authors reply, and how reviewers report on obtained additional data and their consequences for the review. METHODS FOR THE SURVEY: The same eligible reviews for the cross-sectional study will also be eligible for the survey. Surveys will be sent to the contact addresses of these reviews according to a pre-defined protocol. We will use Google Forms as our survey platform. Surveyees are asked to answer eight questions. The survey will primarily focus on the consequences of contacting authors of eligible primary studies for the risk of bias and Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluation scores and the primary and secondary outcomes of the review. DISCUSSION: The findings of this study could help improve methods of contacting authors and reporting of these procedures and their outcomes. Patients, clinicians, researchers, guideline developers, research sponsors, and the general public will all be beneficiaries.Entities:
Keywords: Author contact; Cochrane Collaboration; Contact data; Email address; Meta-analysis; Methodology; Missing data; Replying author; Reporting; Risk of bias; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29216930 PMCID: PMC5721423 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-017-0643-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
Fig. 1Flow diagram of the research methods
Questions on contacting of authors for the cross-sectional study
| Section | Questions and answers and criteria for addressing questions |
|---|---|
| Reporting on contacting of studies | Question 1. Did the reviewers report that they contacted studies? |
| Answer 1. Yes/no | |
| Criteria for addressing question 1: | |
| Yes: When the reviewers report that they contacted one or more studies to obtain additional information. “Yes” is also scored when reviewers reported that they wanted to contact one or more of these studies, but contact information could not be obtained. | |
| No: When the reviewers did not report whether studies were contacted to obtain additional information. | |
| No: When reviewers report that they did not contact studies to obtain additional information. | |
| “No” is also scored when reviewers describe that they planned to contact studies in the methods section, but do not further report on contacting studies. | |
| “No” is also scored when in the section “Contribution of Authors” specific reviewers are linked to contacting authors without further specification, but in the review itself there is no reported proof that studies were actually contacted. The rationale for this “No” score is that such linking could indeed refer to contacting of studies to obtain additional information (e.g., missing data and risk of bias), but could also refer to contacting of authors to assess the eligibility of studies or contacting of authors to identify additional or ongoing studies. | |
| Reporting on contacting of studies with “Unclear” risk of bias domainsa | Question 2. Did the reviewers report that all studies with at least one “Unclear” (as a result of missing or insufficient information) risk of bias score were contacted? |
| Answer 2. Yes/no/not applicable (NA) | |
| Criteria for addressing question 2: | |
| Yes: Studies were contacted and all studies with at least one “Unclear” (as a result of missing or insufficient information) risk of bias score were contacted. We will still score “Yes” when reviewers reported that they wanted to contact all studies with “Unclear” (as a result of missing or insufficient information) risk of bias scores, but contact information could not be obtained for one or more of these studies. | |
| No: Studies were contacted, but not all studies with at least one “Unclear” (as a result of missing or insufficient information) risk of bias score were contacted. | |
| NA: Studies were contacted, but “Unclear” (as a result of missing or insufficient information) risk of bias scores were not assigned to any of the domains of the included studies. | |
| Reporting all contacted studies | Question 3. Could the number of all contacted studies be identified in the review? |
| Answer 3. Yes/no | |
| Criteria for addressing question 3: | |
| Yes: When the number of all contacted studies could be identified in the review. We still scored “Yes” when reviewers reported that they wanted to contact one or more of these studies, but contact information could not be obtained. | |
| No: When the number of all contacted studies could not be identified in the review. | |
| No: When one or more studies have been contacted, but it was impossible to identify the exact total number of studies that were contacted. | |
| Number of contacted studies | Question 4. What is the number of contacted studies in the review? |
| Answer 4. Present the number of contacted studies in the review. | |
| Criteria for addressing question 4: | |
| Only the actual number of studies that was contacted will be scored. Studies that were not contacted because contact information was not available will not be included in this number. | |
| Reporting all replying studies | Question 5. Could the number of all replying studies be identified in the review? |
| Answer 5. Yes/no | |
| Criteria for addressing question 5: | |
| Yes: When the number of all replying studies could be identified in the review. | |
| No: When the number of all replying studies could not be identified (e.g., as a result of unclear reporting) in the review. | |
| No: When one or more contacted studies replied, but it was impossible to identify the exact total number of studies that replied. | |
| Number of replying studies | Question 6. What is the number of contacted studies in the review that replied? |
| Answer 6. Present the number of studies that replied. | |
| Criteria for addressing question 6: | |
| The actual number of studies that replied will be scored. | |
| Reporting on obtained additional information data | Question 7. Did the reviewers report what information data was(were) obtained from each of the replying studies? |
| Answer 7. Yes/no | |
| Criteria for addressing question 7: | |
| Yes: The reviewers reported what information data was(were) obtained from each of the replying studies. | |
| Yes: The reviewers reported that the replying studies explained that they could not provide the requested data. | |
| No: The reviewers did not report what information data was(were) obtained from each of the replying studies. | |
| No: The reviewers reported that information data was(were) obtained from the replying studies, but this was partially reported or it was unclear what these data were. | |
| Reporting on the consequences of obtained additional information data | Question 8. Were the consequences (e.g., modified statistics and risk of bias or GRADE scores) of each of the obtained information data reported? |
| Answer 8. Yes/no | |
| Criteria for addressing question 8: | |
| Yes: The review reported the consequences of each of the obtained information data. | |
| No: The review did not report the consequences of any of the obtained information data. | |
| No: The review reported the consequences of some obtained information data, but not for each of the obtained information data. |
aHiggins et al. [47] divide the definition of “Unclear” risk of bias in three subgroups: Studies are assessed as at unclear risk of bias (1) when too few details are available to make a judgement of “high” or “low” risk; (2) when the risk of bias is genuinely unknown despite sufficient information about the conduct; or (3) when an entry is not relevant to a study (for example because the study did not address any of the outcomes in the group of outcomes to which the entry applies). In this cross-sectional study, we only refer to contacting of authors for the first subgroup of the definition of “Unclear” risk of bias by Higgins et al. [47].
Fig. 2Flow diagram of the research questions on contacting of authors in the cross-sectional study. NA not applicable
Questions on contacting of authors for the survey
| Section | Questions and answers and criteria for addressing questions |
|---|---|
| Title of the systematic review | Question 1. Could you please insert the title of your review? |
| (Please copy and paste your review title from our email) | |
| Answer 1. Insert title: …………………………………………………………………………………….. | |
| Contacting of the eligible included studies for additional information | Question 2. Did you contact any of the study authors of the eligible studies in your review to obtain additional information (e.g., issues on risk of bias and unclear or missing data) on these included studies? |
| Please assess carefully the possible answers to this question: | |
| Yes: If you contacted (through mail, telephone etc.) one or more authors of the eligible studies in your review to obtain additional information on these included studies (e.g., issues on risk of bias, unclear, or missing data). | |
| No: When authors were not contacted or when authors were contacted for other reasons e.g., to verify potential eligibility of studies or to obtain information on unknown completed or ongoing studies. | |
| Answer 2. Yes or no | |
| Valid contact data | Question 3. Had all contacted studies valid contact data? |
| Please assess carefully the possible answers to this question: | |
| Valid contact data refers to having one or more of the following functioning contact data, i.e., email addresses, telephone numbers, fax numbers, and postal addresses. | |
| Answer 3. Yes or no | |
| Effect on risk of bias scores | Question 4. Were one or more risk of bias scores in your review modified as a result of the information obtained from contacted studies? |
| Please assess carefully the possible answers to this question: | |
| Yes: One or more risk of bias scores in your review were modified as a result of the information obtained from the contacted studies. | |
| No: None of the risk of bias scores in your review were modified as a result of the information obtained from the contacted studies. | |
| Not applicable: Risk of bias was not assessed in your review or this question could not be addressed for other reasons. | |
| Answer 4. Yes, no, not applicable | |
| Effect on the GRADE score | Question 5. Were GRADE scores for one or more outcomes modified as a result of the information obtained from the contacted studies? |
| Please assess carefully the possible answers to this question: | |
| Yes: GRADE scores for one or more outcomes were modified as a result of the information obtained from the contacted studies. | |
| No: GRADE scores for one or more outcomes were not modified as a result of the information obtained from the contacted studies. | |
| Not applicable: GRADE scores were not assessed in your review or this question could not be addressed for other reasons. | |
| Answer 5. Yes, no, not applicable | |
| Effect on the summary primary or secondary outcomes | Question 6. Were any of the summary primary or secondary outcomes of the review modified as a result of the information obtained from the contacted studies? |
| Please assess carefully the possible answers to this question: | |
| Yes: One or more summary primary or secondary outcomes of the review were modified as a result of the information obtained from the contacted studies. | |
| No: None of the summary primary or secondary outcomes of the review were modified as a result of the information obtained from the contacted studies. | |
| Answer 6. Yes or no | |
| Effect on the summary effect size of the primary outcome | Question 7. How was the summary effect size of the primary outcome modified as a result of the information obtained from the contacted studies? |
| Please assess carefully the possible answers to this question: | |
| Increased: The summary effect size of the primary outcome increased as a result of the information obtained from the contacted studies. | |
| Decreased: The summary effect size of the primary outcome decreased as a result of the information obtained from the contacted studies. | |
| Unchanged: The summary effect size of the primary outcome did not change as a result of the information obtained from the contacted studies. | |
| Not applicable: The summary effect size of the primary outcome was not measured in your review or this question could not be addressed for other reasons. | |
| Answer 7. Increased, decreased, unchanged, not applicable | |
| Optional question | Question 8. Could you please describe some issues that you want to share with us regarding contacting of study authors of the eligible studies included in your review? |
| Answer 8. I have the following issues to share: | |
| I have no further issues to share. |