The currency, completeness and quality of systematic reviews of acute management of moderate to severe traumatic brain injury : a comprehensive evidence map

Objective: To appraise the currency, completeness and quality of evidence from systematic reviews (SRs) of acute management of moderate to severe traumatic brain injury (TBI). Methods: We conducted comprehensive searches to March 2016 for published, English-language SRs and RCTs of acute management...

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Main Authors: Gruen, Russell Lindsay, Synnot, Anneliese, Bragge, Peter, Lunny, Carole, Menon, David, Clavisi, Ornella, Pattuwage, Loyal, Volovici, Victor, Mondello, Stefania, Cnossen, Maryse C., Donoghue, Emma, Maas, Andrew
Other Authors: Hills, Robert K.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2019
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/103400
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/47316
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1034002020-11-01T05:19:05Z The currency, completeness and quality of systematic reviews of acute management of moderate to severe traumatic brain injury : a comprehensive evidence map Gruen, Russell Lindsay Synnot, Anneliese Bragge, Peter Lunny, Carole Menon, David Clavisi, Ornella Pattuwage, Loyal Volovici, Victor Mondello, Stefania Cnossen, Maryse C. Donoghue, Emma Maas, Andrew Hills, Robert K. Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine) DRNTU::Science::Medicine Traumatic Brain Injury Systematic Review Objective: To appraise the currency, completeness and quality of evidence from systematic reviews (SRs) of acute management of moderate to severe traumatic brain injury (TBI). Methods: We conducted comprehensive searches to March 2016 for published, English-language SRs and RCTs of acute management of moderate to severe TBI. Systematic reviews and RCTs were grouped under 12 broad intervention categories. For each review, we mapped the included and non-included RCTs, noting the reasons why RCTs were omitted. An SR was judged as ‘current’ when it included the most recently published RCT we found on their topic, and ‘complete’ when it included every RCT we found that met its inclusion criteria, taking account of when the review was conducted. Quality was assessed using the AMSTAR checklist (trichotomised into low, moderate and high quality). Findings: We included 85 SRs and 213 RCTs examining the effectiveness of treatments for acute management of moderate to severe TBI. The most frequently reviewed interventions were hypothermia (n = 17, 14.2%), hypertonic saline and/or mannitol (n = 9, 7.5%) and surgery (n = 8, 6.7%). Of the 80 single-intervention SRs, approximately half (n = 44, 55%) were judged as current and two-thirds (n = 52, 65.0%) as complete. When considering only the most recently published review on each intervention (n = 25), currency increased to 72.0% (n = 18). Less than half of the 85 SRs were judged as high quality (n = 38, 44.7%), and nearly 20% were low quality (n = 16, 18.8%). Only 16 (20.0%) of the single-intervention reviews (and none of the five multi-intervention reviews) were judged as current, complete and high-quality. These included reviews of red blood cell transfusion, hypothermia, management guided by intracranial pressure, pharmacological agents (various) and prehospital intubation. Over three-quarters (n = 167, 78.4%) of the 213 RCTs were included in one or more SR. Of the remainder, 17 (8.0%) RCTs post-dated or were out of scope of existing SRs, and 29 (13.6%) were on interventions that have not been assessed in SRs. Conclusion: A substantial number of SRs in acute management of moderate to severe TBI lack currency, completeness and quality. We have identified both potential evidence gaps and also substantial research waste. Novel review methods, such as Living Systematic Reviews, may ameliorate these shortcomings and enhance utility and reliability of the evidence underpinning clinical care. Published version 2019-01-02T07:42:12Z 2019-12-06T21:11:49Z 2019-01-02T07:42:12Z 2019-12-06T21:11:49Z 2018 Journal Article Synnot, A., Bragge, P., Lunny, C., Menon, D., Clavisi, O., Pattuwage, L., . . . Maas, A. (2018). The currency, completeness and quality of systematic reviews of acute management of moderate to severe traumatic brain injury : a comprehensive evidence map. PLOS ONE, 13(6), e0198676-. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0198676 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/103400 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/47316 10.1371/journal.pone.0198676 en PLOS ONE © 2018 Synnot et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. 25 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Science::Medicine
Traumatic Brain Injury
Systematic Review
spellingShingle DRNTU::Science::Medicine
Traumatic Brain Injury
Systematic Review
Gruen, Russell Lindsay
Synnot, Anneliese
Bragge, Peter
Lunny, Carole
Menon, David
Clavisi, Ornella
Pattuwage, Loyal
Volovici, Victor
Mondello, Stefania
Cnossen, Maryse C.
Donoghue, Emma
Maas, Andrew
The currency, completeness and quality of systematic reviews of acute management of moderate to severe traumatic brain injury : a comprehensive evidence map
description Objective: To appraise the currency, completeness and quality of evidence from systematic reviews (SRs) of acute management of moderate to severe traumatic brain injury (TBI). Methods: We conducted comprehensive searches to March 2016 for published, English-language SRs and RCTs of acute management of moderate to severe TBI. Systematic reviews and RCTs were grouped under 12 broad intervention categories. For each review, we mapped the included and non-included RCTs, noting the reasons why RCTs were omitted. An SR was judged as ‘current’ when it included the most recently published RCT we found on their topic, and ‘complete’ when it included every RCT we found that met its inclusion criteria, taking account of when the review was conducted. Quality was assessed using the AMSTAR checklist (trichotomised into low, moderate and high quality). Findings: We included 85 SRs and 213 RCTs examining the effectiveness of treatments for acute management of moderate to severe TBI. The most frequently reviewed interventions were hypothermia (n = 17, 14.2%), hypertonic saline and/or mannitol (n = 9, 7.5%) and surgery (n = 8, 6.7%). Of the 80 single-intervention SRs, approximately half (n = 44, 55%) were judged as current and two-thirds (n = 52, 65.0%) as complete. When considering only the most recently published review on each intervention (n = 25), currency increased to 72.0% (n = 18). Less than half of the 85 SRs were judged as high quality (n = 38, 44.7%), and nearly 20% were low quality (n = 16, 18.8%). Only 16 (20.0%) of the single-intervention reviews (and none of the five multi-intervention reviews) were judged as current, complete and high-quality. These included reviews of red blood cell transfusion, hypothermia, management guided by intracranial pressure, pharmacological agents (various) and prehospital intubation. Over three-quarters (n = 167, 78.4%) of the 213 RCTs were included in one or more SR. Of the remainder, 17 (8.0%) RCTs post-dated or were out of scope of existing SRs, and 29 (13.6%) were on interventions that have not been assessed in SRs. Conclusion: A substantial number of SRs in acute management of moderate to severe TBI lack currency, completeness and quality. We have identified both potential evidence gaps and also substantial research waste. Novel review methods, such as Living Systematic Reviews, may ameliorate these shortcomings and enhance utility and reliability of the evidence underpinning clinical care.
author2 Hills, Robert K.
author_facet Hills, Robert K.
Gruen, Russell Lindsay
Synnot, Anneliese
Bragge, Peter
Lunny, Carole
Menon, David
Clavisi, Ornella
Pattuwage, Loyal
Volovici, Victor
Mondello, Stefania
Cnossen, Maryse C.
Donoghue, Emma
Maas, Andrew
format Article
author Gruen, Russell Lindsay
Synnot, Anneliese
Bragge, Peter
Lunny, Carole
Menon, David
Clavisi, Ornella
Pattuwage, Loyal
Volovici, Victor
Mondello, Stefania
Cnossen, Maryse C.
Donoghue, Emma
Maas, Andrew
author_sort Gruen, Russell Lindsay
title The currency, completeness and quality of systematic reviews of acute management of moderate to severe traumatic brain injury : a comprehensive evidence map
title_short The currency, completeness and quality of systematic reviews of acute management of moderate to severe traumatic brain injury : a comprehensive evidence map
title_full The currency, completeness and quality of systematic reviews of acute management of moderate to severe traumatic brain injury : a comprehensive evidence map
title_fullStr The currency, completeness and quality of systematic reviews of acute management of moderate to severe traumatic brain injury : a comprehensive evidence map
title_full_unstemmed The currency, completeness and quality of systematic reviews of acute management of moderate to severe traumatic brain injury : a comprehensive evidence map
title_sort currency, completeness and quality of systematic reviews of acute management of moderate to severe traumatic brain injury : a comprehensive evidence map
publishDate 2019
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/103400
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/47316
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