High variability in results and methodological quality among overlapping systematic reviews on the same topics in surgery: a meta-epidemiological study

Author:

Katsura Morihiro12ORCID,Kuriyama Akira3ORCID,Tada Masafumi45,Tsujimoto Yasushi46ORCID,Luo Yan4,Yamamoto Kazumichi47ORCID,So Ryuhei48,Aga Masaharu9,Matsushima Kazuhide10ORCID,Fukuma Shingo1ORCID,Furukawa Toshi A4

Affiliation:

1. Human Health Sciences, Kyoto University Graduate School of Medicine, Kyoto, Japan

2. Department of Surgery, Okinawa Chubu Hospital, Okinawa, Japan

3. Emergency and Critical Care Centre, Kurashiki Central Hospital, Okayama, Japan

4. Department of Health Promotion and Human Behavior, Kyoto University Graduate School of Medicine/School of Public Health, Kyoto, Japan

5. Department of Neurology, Emergency Medicine, Nagoya City University East Medical Centre, Nagoya, Japan

6. Department of Nephrology and Dialysis, Kyoritsu Hospital, Hyogo, Japan

7. Institute for Airway Disease, Hyogo, Japan

8. Okayama Psychiatric Medical Centre, Okayama, Japan

9. Department of Respiratory Medicine, Yokohama Municipal Citizen’s Hospital, Kanagawa, Japan

10. Division of Acute Care Surgery, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, USA

Abstract

Abstract Background Redundant publication of systematic reviews and meta-analyses (SRs/MAs) on the same topic presents an increasing burden for clinicians. The aim of this study was to describe variabilities in effect size and methodological quality of overlapping surgery-related SRs/MAs and to investigate factors associated with their postpublication citations. Methods PubMed/MEDLINE was searched to identify SRs/MAs of RCTs on thoracoabdominal surgeries published in 2015. Previous SRs/MAs on the same topics published within the preceding 5 years (2011–2015) were identified and 5-year citation counts (through to 2020) were evaluated. Discrepancies in pooled effect sizes and their methodological quality using A Measurement Tool to Assess Systematic Reviews (AMSTAR) among overlapping SRs/MAs were assessed. The SR/MA-level factors associated with 5-year citation counts were explored, using a mixed-effects regression model with a random intercept for surgical topics. Results A total of 57 surgery-related SRs/MAs (48 topics) published in 2015 were identified, and 146 SRs/MAs had overlapping publications on 29 topics (60.4 per cent of all topics) in the preceding 5 years. There was considerable variability in methodological quality of SRs/MAs and coverage probability for relevant RCTs, resulting in discrepant effect size estimates for the same topic. High quality (AMSTAR score 8–11) was independently associated with higher 5-year citation counts (coefficient = 32.82; 95 per cent c.i. 15.63 to 50.02; P < 0.001). Conclusion Overlapping SRs/MAs with high variability in results and methodological quality were common in surgery. A high-quality SR/MA score was an independent predictor of more frequent citations. Researchers and journal editors should concentrate their efforts on limiting publications to higher-quality reviews.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Surgery

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