| Literature DB >> 31952495 |
Heather Munthe-Kaas1, Heid Nøkleby2, Simon Lewin2,3, Claire Glenton2,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Systematic reviews are a key input to health and social welfare decisions. Studies included in systematic reviews often vary with respect to contextual factors that may impact on how transferable review findings are to the review context. However, many review authors do not consider the transferability of review findings until the end of the review process, for example when assessing confidence in the evidence using GRADE or GRADE-CERQual. This paper describes the TRANSFER Approach, a novel approach for supporting collaboration between review authors and stakeholders from the beginning of the review process to systematically and transparently consider factors that may influence the transferability of systematic review findings.Entities:
Keywords: Applicability; Evidence; GRADE; GRADE-CERQual; Indirectness; Relevance; Stakeholder engagement; Systematic review methodology; Transferability
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31952495 PMCID: PMC6967089 DOI: 10.1186/s12874-019-0834-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
The need for contextualizing evidence
Fig. 1TRANSFER diagram
What is new and what are the implications of the TRANSFER Approach?
This paper outlines new guidance for review authors on how to consider and assess the transferability of review findings to the context(s) specified in the review. The TRANSFER Approach supports review authors in making systematic and transparent assessments of transferability that can be used to provide a systematic and transparent assessment of the GRADE domain In many reviews, the review team only considers transferability (or related concepts such as applicability, indirectness, relevance) of the review findings at the end of the review process and in an ad hoc manner. By considering factors which may influence transferability early in the review process and in collaboration with decision makers, the review team is better able to systematically and transparently make an assessment of how these factors may influence the transferability of the review findings to the context specified in the review, or another context. Such systematic assessments of transferability will also provide transparency to assessments of the GRADE domain |
TRANSFER Approach in the systematic review process – overview of relevant people and components involved in each stage
| Relevant stages of the review process | People involved in each stage | Relevant TRANSFER component |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Establish the need for a systematic review | Stakeholders Review authors | Not applicable |
2. a. Collaborate with stakeholders to refine the review question b. Identify and prioritize TRANSFER factors c. Define the context specified in the review with respect to TRANSFER factors | Stakeholders Review authors | TRANSFER Guidance for review authors: a. PICO Template ( b. TRANSFER Conversation Guide ( c. TRANSFER Characteristics of context ( |
| 3. Conduct the systematic review | Review authors | Not applicable |
| 4. Compare the included studies to the context specified in the review (global and/or local) with respect to TRANSFER factors | Review authors | TRANSFER Guidance for review authors (TRANSFER table of included studies; |
| 5. Assess the transferability of the review findings to the context specified in the review (global and/or local) | Review authors | TRANSFER Guidance for review authors (TRANSFER assessment template; |
| 6. Apply GRADE for effectiveness or GRADE-CERQual to assess certainty/confidence in review findings | Review authors | TRANSFER Guidance for review authors (TRANSFER assessment template; |
| 7. Discuss transferability of review findings | Stakeholders Review authors | Not applicable |
Scenario – establishing the need for a systematic review
Scenario – refining the review question
Scenario – identifying TRANSFER factors
Following the meeting, you search for any evidence to support the hypotheses that the identified factors may influence transferability of the review findings. Evidence is found to support two of these hypotheses, and the third factor (climate) is included despite a lack of evidence supporting its influence on the effect of housing programmes. These factors are then listed in the protocol as explanatory factors on which subgroup analyses could be undertaken. |
Scenario – defining characteristics of the review context related to TRANSFER factors
| Context specified in the review: Global | |
| Transferability factors | Characteristics of review context |
| Average length of homelessness among homeless individuals | Length of time spent homeless by individuals included in the studies |
| Quality of usual housing services | Range of quality of usual housing services offered in various study settings |
| Climate (weather conditions) | Range of weather conditions (warm, cold, temperate climates, etc.) in the study settings |
| The review authors then specify the characteristics of the secondary context (Norway) according to the transferability factors identified. Research from Norway indicates that almost two thirds of the homeless population have been homeless for six months or longer [ | |
| Secondary context: Norway | |
| Transferability factors | Characteristics of specified context |
| Length of homelessness: | Most people who are homeless are homeless for more than 6 months at a time |
| Quality of usual services: | Residents who experience homelessness are provided high quality and comprehensive housing services as part of usual services |
| Climate: | Very cold winters |
Scenario – conducting the systematic review
Scenario – Comparing the contexts of the included studies to the context specified in the review
| Studies/Factors | Length of homelessness | Quality of usual HOUSING services | Climate |
| Study 1 | > 6 months | High quality | Cold |
| Study 2 | < 6 months | High quality | Cold |
| Study 3 | < 6 months | High quality | Cold |
| Study 4 | > 6 months | High quality | Cold |
| Study 5 | < 6 months | Low quality | Cold |
| Study 6 | < 6 months | Low quality | Cold |
| Study 7 | > 6 months | Low quality | Cold |
| Study 8 | < 6 months | Low quality | Cold |
| Study 9 | > 6 months | Low quality | Cold |
| Study 10 | < 6 months | Low quality | Cold |
Scenario – assessing the transferability of review findings to the context specified in the review
Scenario – assessing certainty in the review findings
Scenario – discussing transferability of the review findings
TRANSFER in progress – priorities for further research
The TRANSFER Approach is still under development and some issues are still being discussed and piloted. Further research is needed to examine the following issues: - How do we systematically assess transferability for reviews that do not include a meta-analysis (e.g., where there is only a structured synthesis of the results in a narrative form?) [ - What are the best methods for presenting assessments of transferability to different users? - Are factors identified by stakeholders in one setting likely to be important in another setting? How do we apply the findings from a review commissioned from decision makers in one context (such as hospitals in the Norwegian health system) to another decision making context (such as hospitals in one Spanish region)? - How can TRANSFER be used in the context of GRADE-CERQual (qualitative evidence syntheses), mixed methods reviews, and/or realist reviews? - How do review authors make an assessment of transferability where there are interactions between TRANSFER factors? - For a given systematic review using the TRANSFER Approach, what proportion of publications included in that systematic review include details related to the identified TRANSFER factors? |
Sample PICO clarification template
| Suggested inclusion criteria | Questions for decision makers | Final inclusion criteria | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Population | Everyone | Should we limit the population to only adults with families? Should we included participants with mental illness or substance abuse disorder? | Adults over 18 with/out families with/out mental illness/substance abuse disorders |
| Intervention/ Exposure | Housing programmes | Are there specific models that we are especially interested? Should we include housing programmes that include employment components? Are we interest in financial support only or programmes with case management? | Housing programmes with/out case management |
| Comparison intervention | Other / no intervention | Other / no intervention | |
| Outcome | Days homeless, days in stable housing | Also include measurements related to quality of life? Health? Employment? | Primary: length of time homeless/in stable housing Secondary: QoL, health |
| Study design | RCTs | Should non-randomised studies be included? | RCTs |
| Other | English only, since 2000 | What about other languages? Cut-off date for study inclusion? | All languages, all years |
TRANSFER Conversation Guide
| TRANSFER Factor | Would you be concerned if data comes from contexts where… | Example | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Environmental context | |||
| Temporal context | … the data was collected at a different point in time? | e.g., studies conducted before 2000 | |
| Geopolitical context | … the geographical, political or economic context is different? | e.g., studies conducted in post-conflict settings, settings where there is famine, high income settings, democratic settings, settings with colder/warmer temperatures, rural or urban settings | |
| Health or welfare system context | …the health or welfare system is arranged differently? | e.g., free versus fee-based primary health care, comprehensive vs. limited family welfare services | |
| Local professional/Expert opinion | … local professional/expert opinions are different? | e.g., experts are explicitly in favor or/against the intervention | |
| Community acceptability | … the local community has a different level/degree of acceptability for the intervention or the condition being addressed by the intervention? | e.g. religious reasons, ethical reasons, other social reasons | |
| Existence of alternative and/or co-existing interventions | … participants are exposed to alternative or supplemental interventions while participating in the intervention under examination? | e.g. contexts where all parents of small children are provided with free family counselling at the same time as they participate in a study where the intervention is online counselling for families with small children | |
| Participants | |||
| Participant characteristics | …participants are different with respect to demographic characteristics, level of education, etc.? | e.g., studies on participants older/younger than those in your context, contexts with a different gender ratio, | |
| Participant compliance | …participants are different with respect to how well they follow instructions? | e.g., studies on pedestrian interventions to improve traffic safety in contexts where people are more/less likely to follow traffic rules | |
| Availability of personal support for participants | …participants have different access to personal support networks? | e.g., contexts where families live close by vs. individualistic cultures | |
| Characteristics of illness / condition and comorbidities | …participants’ condition or illness and comorbidities are different? | e.g., studies on premenstrual symptoms from Asian cultures versus western cultures where research suggests a difference in how women experience these conditions | |
| Participant acceptability and preferences | …participants level of acceptability and/or preferences regarding interventions/treatment, etc. are different? | e.g., studies of colon cancer screening interventions for men from contexts where they prefer to be called into/make their own annual appointments | |
| Participant need for / access to information | …participants have a different need for/access to/expectation of information? | e.g., studies from contexts where participants have a greater expectation of receiving comprehensive and detailed information regarding their treatment/intervention | |
| Intervention | |||
| Details related to the intervention | … the intervention components/stages/phases/elements are routinely/consistently differ from your context? | These issues may be covered in while defining the review question and covered under inclusion/exclusion criteria in some cases. | |
| …the intervention has a different duration, frequency, intensity? | These issues may be covered in while defining the review question and covered under inclusion/exclusion criteria in some cases. | ||
| …the intervention is delivered in a different setting? | These issues may be covered in while defining the review question and covered under inclusion/exclusion criteria in some cases. | ||
| …the availability and/or characteristics of materials/manuals for delivering the intervention is different? | These issues may be covered in while defining the review question and covered under inclusion/exclusion criteria in some cases. | ||
| …the intervention is delivered differently than it would be in a “real life setting”? | e.g. laboratory/efficacy studies | ||
| …the intervention has been tailored? | These issues may be covered in while defining the review question and covered under inclusion/exclusion criteria in some cases. | ||
| …the intervention is not delivered according to how it should be (i.e. implantation fidelity)? | e.g., the study authors describe clear deviations from how the intervention is intended to be developed (checklists such as TIDier could be helpful here) | ||
| Category / status of the intervention | … the intervention is categorized differently? | e.g. policy, practice, programme, guideline | |
| Implementation of the intervention | …the intervention is delivered by service providers who differ from those in your setting? | e.g., number of service providers, characteristics of service providers, such as training or skill level or type/status of service providers’ position, their compliance with implementation directions, any other factors that may influence their motivation to implement the intervention, such as religious beliefs, cultural background or support from leadership/colleagues? | |
| …the intervention is implemented by an organization that differs from those that would be expected to implement the intervention in your setting? | e.g., type of organization, size/structure, culture, policies, service and financing systems, interagency working relationships, available/allocated resources, communication/endorsement of intervention, evolution/sustainability of intervention | ||
| Comparison intervention | |||
| …the quality or comprehensiveness of the comparison intervention is different? | This is likely to be important for the transferability of most interventions | ||
| …“usual services” is different with respect to quality, comprehensiveness or content? | This is likely to be important for the transferability of most interventions | ||
| Outcomes | |||
| …the way an outcome is defined or measured is different, including length and intensity of follow-up? | e.g., culturally different scales to measure quality of life, long-term versus short-term follow-up | ||
| …the way an outcome is prioritized (by clients/patients) is different? | e.g., patient-important outcomes | ||
This is the most current version of the conversation guide and was developed based on feedback from review teams and stakeholders who used the previous tested version. Further testing of this version is planned
TRANSFER Characteristics of review context
| Context specifiedin the review: Global | |
|---|---|
| Transferability factors | Characteristics of review context |
| Average length of homelessness among homeless individuals | Length of time spent homeless by individuals included in the studies |
| Quality of usual housing services | Range of quality of usual housing services offered in various study settings |
| Climate (weather conditions) | Range of weather conditions (warm, cold, temperate climates, etc.) in the study settings |
TRANSFER Characteristics of secondary context
| Secondary context: Norway | |
|---|---|
| Transferability factors | Characteristics of specified context |
| Length of homelessness: | Most people who are homeless are homeless for more than 6 months at a time |
| Quality of usual services: | Residents who experience homelessness are provided high quality and comprehensive housing services as part of usual services |
| Climate: | Very cold winters |
TRANSFER Table of Included Studies for review context
| Review finding: Homeless programmes lead to fewer days spent homeless compared to usual services | |||
Context of interest: Context of interest in the review (Global) Average length of homelessness among homeless: varies Quality of usual housing services: varies Climate conditions: varies | |||
| Factors / Studies | Length of homelessness | Quality of usual housing services | Climate conditions |
| Study 1 | < 4 years | High quality | Cold |
| Study 2 | < 2 years | High quality | Cold |
| Study 3 | < 4 years | Low quality | Cold |
| Study 4 | > 4 years | No services | Cold |
| Study 5 | > 4 years | Low quality | Cold |
| Study 6 | > 4 years | Low quality | Cold |
| SUMMARY | No concerns | No concerns | Minor concerns |
TRANSFER Table of Included Studies for secondary context
| Review finding: Homeless programmes lead to fewer days spent homeless compared to usual services | |||
Context of interest: Norway Average length of homelessness among homeless: > 4 years Quality of usual housing services: high Climate conditions: Cold climate most of year | |||
| Factors / Studies | Length of homelessness | Quality of usual housing services | Climate conditions |
| Study 1 | < 4 years | High quality | Cold |
| Study 2 | < 2 years | High quality | Cold |
| Study 3 | < 4 years | Low quality | Cold |
| Study 4 | > 4 years | No services | Cold |
| Study 5 | > 4 years | Low quality | Cold |
| Study 6 | > 4 years | Low quality | Cold |
| SUMMARY | Minor concerns | Minor concerns | No concerns |
TRANSFER Assessment –context specified in the review
| Review finding: Homeless programmes lead to fewer days spent homeless compared to usual services | |||
Context of interest: Global Average length of homelessness among homeless: varies Quality of usual housing services: varies Climate conditions: varies | |||
| TRANSFER factors | Assessment | Explanation | Supporting studies |
| Length of homelessness of participants | No concerns | The studies represented a range of participants with length of homelessness at baseline ranging from 1 month to more than 6 months. All of the studies showed the same direction of effect. | 1–10 |
| Quality of «usual housing services» | No concerns | The studies represented a range of quality of usual services. All of the studies showed the same direction of effect. | 1–10 |
| Climate conditions | Minor concerns | The studies only partially represented the review context (cold climates). We are unsure if the finding is transferable to settings with warm or temperate climates. | 1–10 |
| Overall assessment | Minor concerns | There are no substantial differences between the included studies and the review context with respect to length of homelessness, quality of usual services or climate. However, the review finding is only based on evidence from cold climate settings, and we do not have any evidence available regarding how the intervention may work in warm settings. | 1–10 |
TRANSFER Assessment – secondary context
| Review finding: Homeless programmes lead to fewer days spent homeless compared to usual services | |||
Secondary context: Norway Average length of homelessness among homeless: > 4 years Quality of usual housing services: high Climate conditions: Cold climate most of year | |||
| TRANSFER factors | Assessment | Explanation | Supporting studies |
| Length of homelessness of participants | Minor concerns | The intervention appears to have a slightly reduced effect for individuals who have been homeless for longer than 6 months. | 1–10 |
| Quality of «usual housing services» | Minor concerns | The intervention appears to have a slightly reduced effect when compared with high quality usual services. | 1–10 |
| Climate conditions | No concerns | No concerns regarding differences between studies and review context related to climate. | 1–10 |
| Overall assessment | Moderate concerns | There are minor differences between the included studies and the review context with respect to length of homelessness, quality of usual services or climate. However, the review finding is only based on evidence from cold climate settings, and we do not have any evidence available regarding how the intervention may work in warm settings. | 1–10 |