Development of a scoring system to judge the scientific quality of information from case‐control and cohort studies of nutrition and disease
- 1 January 1995
- journal article
- other
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Nutrition and Cancer
- Vol. 24 (3) , 231-239
- https://doi.org/10.1080/01635589509514412
Abstract
A scoring system was developed to help judge the scientific quality of observational epidemiologic studies linking diet with risk of cancer. The scoring system was developed from key headings used in developing research protocols and included questions under headings: three for case‐control studies (dietary assessment, recruitment of subjects, and analysis) and four for cohort studies (dietary assessment, definition of cohort, ascertainment, and analysis). Points were awarded for questions in each section, and a total score was derived. Interobserver variation was assessed for five case‐control and five cohort studies for 13 observers; 1 observer repeated the assessment of each paper. Absolute scores and ranking within observer were assessed. There was good agreement between observers in the ranking of studies. Papers that scored higher presented sufficient detail to enable the questions in the scoring system to be answered more easily. For some studies, the information required was either not collected or, if it was collected, not presented. In either case, the frequent lack of information available to judge papers raises questions about the editorial policy and review process of journals publishing dietary studies as much as it does about the scoring system. Applying the scoring system to a review of meat and cancer risk suggested that, taking the score into account, from what seemed like a large literature, there were relatively few studies that scored well (defined as a score >65%), but these studies tended to provide more consistent information.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Use of Meta-Analysis in Epidemiology: Diet and Cancers of the Breast and ColonPublished by Oxford University Press (OUP) ,2009
- A meta-analysis of studies of dietary fat and breast cancer riskBritish Journal of Cancer, 1993
- Letters to the EditorsBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1993
- A meta-analysis of the effect of estrogen replacement therapy on the risk of breast cancerJAMA, 1991
- A meta-analysis of alcoholic beverage consumption in relation to risk of colorectal cancerCancer Causes & Control, 1990
- QUANTITATIVE METHODS IN THE REVIEW OF EPIDEMIOLOGIC LITERATURE1Epidemiologic Reviews, 1987