Abstract
Background
Selective reporting is included as a core domain of Cochrane’s tool for assessing risk of bias in randomised trials. There has been no evaluation of review authors’ use of this domain. We aimed to evaluate assessments of selective reporting in a cross-section of Cochrane reviews, and to outline areas for improvement.
Methods
We obtained data on selective reporting judgements for 8,434 studies included in 586 Cochrane reviews published from Issue 1-8, 2015. One author classified reasons for judgements of high risk of selective reporting bias. We randomly selected 100 reviews with at least one trial rated at high risk of outcome non-reporting bias (non-/partial reporting of an outcome on the basis of its results). One author recorded whether authors of these reviews incorporated the selective reporting assessment when interpreting results.
Results
Of the 8,434 studies, 1055 (13%) were rated at high risk of bias on the selective reporting domain. The most common reason was concern about outcome non-reporting bias. Few studies were rated at high risk because of concerns about bias in selection of the reported result (e.g. reporting of only a subset of measurements, analysis methods or subsets of the data that were pre-specified). Review authors often specified in the risk of bias tables the study outcomes that were not reported (84% of studies), but less frequently specified the outcomes that were partially reported (61% of studies). At least one study was rated at high
risk of outcome non-reporting bias in 31% of reviews. In the random sample of these reviews, only 30% incorporated this information when interpreting results, by acknowledging that the synthesis of an outcome was missing data that were not/partially reported.
Conclusion
Our audit of user practice in Cochrane reviews suggests that the assessment of selective reporting in the current risk of bias tool does not work well. It is not always clear which outcomes were selectively reported, or what the corresponding risk of bias is in the synthesis with missing outcome data. New tools that will make it easier for reviewers to convey this information are being developed.
Selective reporting is included as a core domain of Cochrane’s tool for assessing risk of bias in randomised trials. There has been no evaluation of review authors’ use of this domain. We aimed to evaluate assessments of selective reporting in a cross-section of Cochrane reviews, and to outline areas for improvement.
Methods
We obtained data on selective reporting judgements for 8,434 studies included in 586 Cochrane reviews published from Issue 1-8, 2015. One author classified reasons for judgements of high risk of selective reporting bias. We randomly selected 100 reviews with at least one trial rated at high risk of outcome non-reporting bias (non-/partial reporting of an outcome on the basis of its results). One author recorded whether authors of these reviews incorporated the selective reporting assessment when interpreting results.
Results
Of the 8,434 studies, 1055 (13%) were rated at high risk of bias on the selective reporting domain. The most common reason was concern about outcome non-reporting bias. Few studies were rated at high risk because of concerns about bias in selection of the reported result (e.g. reporting of only a subset of measurements, analysis methods or subsets of the data that were pre-specified). Review authors often specified in the risk of bias tables the study outcomes that were not reported (84% of studies), but less frequently specified the outcomes that were partially reported (61% of studies). At least one study was rated at high
risk of outcome non-reporting bias in 31% of reviews. In the random sample of these reviews, only 30% incorporated this information when interpreting results, by acknowledging that the synthesis of an outcome was missing data that were not/partially reported.
Conclusion
Our audit of user practice in Cochrane reviews suggests that the assessment of selective reporting in the current risk of bias tool does not work well. It is not always clear which outcomes were selectively reported, or what the corresponding risk of bias is in the synthesis with missing outcome data. New tools that will make it easier for reviewers to convey this information are being developed.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 108 |
Number of pages | 8 |
Journal | Systematic Reviews |
Volume | 5 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 8 Jul 2016 |
Research Groups and Themes
- ConDuCT-II
Keywords
- Bias
- Quality
- Methodology
- Randomised trials
- Systematic reviews