Sources of evidence for systematic reviews of interventions in diabetes
- 1 October 2005
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Diabetic Medicine
- Vol. 22 (10) , 1386-1393
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1464-5491.2005.01645.x
Abstract
To analyse the effect on systematic reviews in diabetes interventions of including only trials that are indexed in medline, and to assess the impact of adding trials from other databases and the grey literature. All systematic reviews of diabetes interventions which included a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials, and were published since 1996, were selected. The impact on the meta-analysis of including only those trials indexed in medline, and the effect of then adding trials from other sources, was assessed. Where possible this was measured quantitatively, by redoing the meta-analysis, otherwise a qualitative estimate was made. Forty-four systematic reviews met our inclusion criteria. There were 120 articles reporting trial data which were not indexed in medline. These came from 52% of the reviews. In 34% of the reviews, basing a meta-analysis on a search of only medline would miss trials that could affect the result. Sources of non-medline data which had the biggest effect on the meta-analyses were journal articles from central and embase (mainly in Diabetes, Nutrition and Metabolism) and unpublished data (mainly from industry). The exceptions were journal articles on herbal medicine, mostly indexed in Chinese language databases. A search of only the medline database is insufficient for systematic reviews of diabetes, because in about 34% of reviews the missed trials could affect the results of the meta-analysis. It is recommended that central (on the Cochrane Library) also be searched. Scanning meeting abstracts, and seeking unpublished data are also recommended if the intervention has only recently been introduced.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- The effect of metformin on blood pressure, plasma cholesterol and triglycerides in type 2 diabetes mellitus: a systematic reviewJournal of Internal Medicine, 2004
- New Onset Diabetes Mellitus in Patients Receiving Calcineurin Inhibitors: A Systematic Review and Meta-AnalysisAmerican Journal of Transplantation, 2004
- Are calcium antagonists beneficial in diabetic patients with hypertension?The American Journal of Medicine, 2004
- Are β-blockers as efficacious in patients with diabetes mellitus as in patients without diabetes mellitus who have chronic heart failure? A meta-analysis of large-scale clinical trialsAmerican Heart Journal, 2003
- Should meta-analysts search Embase in addition to Medline?Journal of Clinical Epidemiology, 2003
- Meta-Analysis of Randomized Educational and Behavioral Interventions in Type 2 DiabetesThe Diabetes Educator, 2003
- Self‐monitoring in Type 2 diabetes mellitus: a meta‐analysisDiabetic Medicine, 2000
- Therapeutic benefits of ACE inhibitors and other antihypertensive drugs in patients with type 2 diabetes.Diabetes Care, 2000
- Diabetes care in general practice: meta-analysis of randomised control trials Commentary: Meta-analysis is a blunt and potentially misleading instrument for analysing models of service deliveryBMJ, 1998
- Efficacy of insulin and sulfonylurea combination therapy in type II diabetes. A meta-analysis of the randomized placebo-controlled trialsArchives of internal medicine (1960), 1996