Dear Editor,A review entitled “Effect of Bisphosphonates on Bone Health in Adult Renal Transplant
Patients: Beyond the First Year Posttransplant—A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis” by Lip
et al.[1] refers readers to a sample search strategy in the Supplemental Material online.
However, the text in Figure 1 is provided in an unreadable format (Wingdings font).Without knowing which keywords and/or subject headings were used to execute a systematic
search, it is not possible to gauge how comprehensive it was and whether eligible studies may
have been missed. At the peer review level, it may be appropriate to request a broader or
otherwise revised search approach before the research is publication worthy. Otherwise,
incomplete identification of relevant studies may result in bias and discrepancies between
systematic reviews.[2,3] PRISMA guidelines, an
evidence-based minimum set of items for reporting systematic reviews, instruct authors to
present the full electronic search strategy for at least 1 database (PRISMA Checklist Item 8).[4]It is also important for peer reviewers and readers to understand the process for selecting
studies, including how references were screened (PRISMA Checklist Item 9)[4]. As the Institute of Medicine[5] explains “[e]ven when the selection criteria are prespecified and explicit, decisions
on including particular studies can be subjective (p 110).” Using a complete dual review
approach, where 2 reviewers screen at both stages, has been shown to identify additional
eligible studies at both the title/abstract and the full-text stage.[6] It should be clear when reading a systematic review if best practices were followed,
including the recommendation to have more than 1 reviewer screen studies for
eligibility.[5,7,8]Journals and peer reviewers should ensure that authors of systematic reviews and
meta-analyses are compliant with PRISMA guidelines. Adherence to reporting guidelines helps
peer reviewers and readers by facilitating the critical appraisal of research using
standardized checklists such as AMSTAR 2 (A MeaSurement Tool to Assess systematic Reviews).[9] As the International Committee of Journal Medical Editors[10] explains, “Journals are encouraged to ask authors to follow these guidelines because
they help authors describe the study in enough detail for it to be evaluated by editors,
reviewers, readers, and other researchers evaluating the medical literature.”[10]Given that this review was conducted at the same institution as the author of this letter, I
was able to communicate with the review authors and verify the search strategy.Sincerely,Sandra McKeownClick here for additional data file.Supplemental material, MEDLINE_Search_06042016 for PRISMA guideline compliance is
imperative for systematic review appraisal by Sandra McKeown in Canadian Journal of Kidney
Health and DiseaseClick here for additional data file.Supplemental material, Supplemental_Tables_-_clean for PRISMA guideline compliance is
imperative for systematic review appraisal by Sandra McKeown in Canadian Journal of Kidney
Health and Disease
Authors: Carolyn R T Stoll; Sonya Izadi; Susan Fowler; Paige Green; Jerry Suls; Graham A Colditz Journal: Res Synth Methods Date: 2019-07-18 Impact factor: 5.273
Authors: Beverley J Shea; Barnaby C Reeves; George Wells; Micere Thuku; Candyce Hamel; Julian Moran; David Moher; Peter Tugwell; Vivian Welch; Elizabeth Kristjansson; David A Henry Journal: BMJ Date: 2017-09-21