Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3265200 Digestive and Liver Disease 2010 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundCochrane systematic reviews are of higher quality than reviews published in scientific journals, yet are used less than other sources for clinical decision-making.AimTo assess whether the characteristics of the Cochrane systematic reviews can account for their scant use by physicians.Materials and methodsWe analysed the 87 Cochrane hepato-biliary reviews dealing with therapeutic topics posted in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews through December 2008, which we classified according to four characteristics: empty reviews; outdated reviews; content of reviews; implications for practice.ResultsSix empty reviews found no eligible randomised trials and six found one trial, precluding a systematic review; some empty reviews investigated irrelevant topics. Twenty-one reviews investigated outdated interventions, and thirteen of them were posted ten or more years after the publication of the most recent trial included. Most reviews were too lengthy (median: 40 pages) and their consultation was time-consuming with respect to clinical content. They generally compared two treatments, disregarding other options, and usually did not report any non-randomised (although convincing) evidence of potential use in clinical decision-making.ConclusionsIf generalized to the entire Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, these characteristics may largely explain why physicians undervalue the Cochrane reviews as a source of evidence for clinical decision-making.

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