Screening for in vitro systematic reviews: a comparison of screening methods and training of a machine learning classifier

Author:

Wilson Emma1ORCID,Cruz Florenz2,Maclean Duncan3,Ghanawi Joly4,McCann Sarah K.2,Brennan Paul M.1,Liao Jing1,Sena Emily S.1,Macleod Malcolm1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. 1Centre for Clinical Brain Sciences, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, U.K.

2. 2Berlin Institute of Health at Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, QUEST Center, Berlin, Germany

3. 3University of Edinburgh Medical School, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, U.K.

4. 4Independent Researcher, U.K.

Abstract

Abstract Objective: Existing strategies to identify relevant studies for systematic review may not perform equally well across research domains. We compare four approaches based on either human or automated screening of either title and abstract or full text, and report the training of a machine learning algorithm to identify in vitro studies from bibliographic records. Methods: We used a systematic review of oxygen–glucose deprivation (OGD) in PC-12 cells to compare approaches. For human screening, two reviewers independently screened studies based on title and abstract or full text, with disagreements reconciled by a third. For automated screening, we applied text mining to either title and abstract or full text. We trained a machine learning algorithm with decisions from 2000 randomly selected PubMed Central records enriched with a dataset of known in vitro studies. Results: Full-text approaches performed best, with human (sensitivity: 0.990, specificity: 1.000 and precision: 0.994) outperforming text mining (sensitivity: 0.972, specificity: 0.980 and precision: 0.764). For title and abstract, text mining (sensitivity: 0.890, specificity: 0.995 and precision: 0.922) outperformed human screening (sensitivity: 0.862, specificity: 0.998 and precision: 0.975). At our target sensitivity of 95% the algorithm performed with specificity of 0.850 and precision of 0.700. Conclusion: In this in vitro systematic review, human screening based on title and abstract erroneously excluded 14% of relevant studies, perhaps because title and abstract provide an incomplete description of methods used. Our algorithm might be used as a first selection phase in in vitro systematic reviews to limit the extent of full text screening required.

Publisher

Portland Press Ltd.

Subject

General Medicine

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