Inclusion of methodological filters in searches for diagnostic test accuracy studies misses relevant studies.

Penny Whiting, M Westwood, R Beynon, M Burke, Jonathan Sterne, Julie Glanville

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle (Academic Journal)peer-review

99 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

ObjectiveTo compare the performance of MEDLINE searches using index test(s) and target condition (subject searches) with the same searches combined with methodological filters for test accuracy studies.Study design and settingWe derived a reference set of 506 test accuracy studies indexed on MEDLINE from seven systematic reviews that conducted extensive searches. We compared the performance of "subject" with "filtered" searches (same searches combined with each of 22 filters). Outcome measures were number of reference set records missed, sensitivity, number needed to read (NNR), and precision (Number of reference set studies identified for every 100 records screened).ResultsSubject searches missed 47 of the 506 reference studies; filtered searches missed an additional 21 to 241 studies. Sensitivity was 91% for subject searches and ranged from 43% to 87% for filtered searches. The NNR was 56 (precision 2%) for subject searches and ranged from 7 to 51 (precision 2-15%) for filtered searches.ConclusionsFiltered searches miss additional studies compared with searches based on index test and target condition. None of the existing filters provided reductions in the NNR for acceptable sensitivity; currently available methodological filters should not be used to identify studies for inclusion in test accuracy reviews.
Translated title of the contributionInclusion of methodological filters in searches for diagnostic test accuracy studies misses relevant studies
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)602 - 607
JournalJournal of Clinical Epidemiology
Volume64
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 13 Nov 2010

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