1 / 20

Gerd Antes German Cochrane Centre, Freiburg

European collaboration to identify reports of controlled trials in general and specialized health care journals published in Western Europe. Gerd Antes German Cochrane Centre, Freiburg Anne Lusher and Carol Lefebvre UK Cochrane Centre, Oxford, UK. Biomed Projects.

haruko
Download Presentation

Gerd Antes German Cochrane Centre, Freiburg

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. European collaboration to identify reports of controlled trials in general and specialized health care journals published in Western Europe Gerd AntesGerman Cochrane Centre, Freiburg Anne Lusher and Carol LefebvreUK Cochrane Centre, Oxford, UK

  2. Biomed Projects • 1995 – 1998 Biomed 1(General health care journals) • 1998 – 2001 Biomed 2(Special health care journals)

  3. ? Transfer of Medical Research into Practice • Information about medical interventions • Clinical studies (controlled / randomized, . .) • Epidemiological (observational -) studies • . . . . Evidence Production • Practicing physicians • Patients • Authorities, health insurances, institutions • Clinical research Evidence Use

  4. Information Paths Not in databases Cochrane Collaboration Controlled Trials Register (CCTR) Others Embase (Elsevier) Medline(US National Library of Health, NLM)

  5. Barriers to trial identification • Scattered across the health care literature • Lack of appropriate indexing terms (Dickersin et al, BMJ 1994;309:1286-91) • Inconsistency in applying available terms (Lefebvre et al, conference National Institutes of Health, 1993) (Jadad et al, Pain 1996;66:239-46) • Incomplete descriptions of research methodology by authors

  6. Barriers to trial identification (2) • Journals not indexed in databases (Egger et al, BMJ 1998;316:61-6) • Exclusion of specific sections of journals (e.g. conference abstracts) from the indexing process (Scherer et al, Cochrane Database of Methodology Reviews, 2001) • Journals published in languages other than English (Egger et al, Lancet 1997;350:326-9)

  7. AIM • To identify reports of controlled trials by searching, by hand, specialized health care journals published in Western Europe OBJECTIVE • To ensure that all trial reports identified in these journals are made accessible through The Cochrane Controlled Trials Register (CCTR), published in The Cochrane Library

  8. METHODSIdentifying the journals to search • Health care journals published in Western Europe were ranked according to likely yield of reports of controlled trials • Each participant identified journals locally which were not indexed in MEDLINE or EMBASE • Collaborative Review Groups were invited to suggest high yield journals in their subject areas published in Western Europe

  9. METHODSHandsearching • All articles, editorials, letters, conference abstracts, news items in each journal were examined and coded as RCT (reports of randomized controlled trials) or CCT (reports of quasi-randomized or possibly randomized trials) • Quality control checks of the handsearch results were carried out

  10. METHODSMaking the trial reports accessible • Titles of trial reports identified in languages other than English were translated • All trial reports identified were submitted for inclusion in CCTR • Trial reports in MEDLINE indexed without appropriate Publication Type terms were sent for re-tagging in MEDLINE

  11. Figure 1

  12. Number of reports of controlled trials identified and number of ‘journal years’ searched per participant

  13. Number of reports of controlled trials identified per participant, which were not previously easily identifiable in MEDLINE as randomized trials – ‘added value’ of the project

  14. Number of reports of randomized trials identified in this project and their accessibility in MEDLINE

  15. Results(July 1998 - June 2001, Biomed 2) • 340 journals searched (published in 15 European countries in 7 languages) • 5,687 ‘journal years’ searched • 36,981 citations of trial reports in a single source • 8,792 trial reports re-tagged in MEDLINE with Publication Type terms • All sections of journals searched including those containing conference abstracts • 11,959 trial reports identified in languages other than English

  16. Number of reports of controlled trials identified by the BIOMED handsearching projects and their accessibility in MEDLINE

  17. Number of reports of controlled trials identified and number of ‘journal years’ searched by each Participant – BIOMED General and Specialized Health Care Journals handsearching projects

  18. Implications for methodological research This project provides a large dataset of: • Abstracts of reports of randomized trials • Trial reports in journals not indexed in databases • Trial reports in languages other than English

  19. Indirect added value • Major input to the development and growth of the Cochrane Collaboration (6000-8000 volunteers) • Starting point for establishing Cochrane Centres (e. g. the German Centre) • CC Trials Register (CCTR) now 350 000 citations • Close cooperation with publishers • Motivation for searching trials in other regions

  20. Some barriers remain… LONGER TERM SOLUTION: • Prospective registration of all randomized trials • Tagging trials with the International Standard Randomised Controlled Trial Number (ISRCTN) • metaRegister of Controlled Trials (http://www.controlled-trials.com)

More Related