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Quality assessment in SLR
Systematic Literature Review Workshop (SLRW)
Dr. Jingjing Lin
Assistant Professor
Centre of IT-based Education
Toyohashi University of Technology
lin.jingjing.qc@tut.jp
Don't judge a book by its cover. (English idiom)
Do not take published studies at face value. (Boland, Cherry, and Dickson, 2017, p.109)
Which side are you on?
• It is published in
Nature! It must be a
good quality study. I
have no doubt of it.
• It is published in Nature! But
the sample is rather small
than usual, I doubt its
generalizability.
(Boland, Cherry, and Dickson, 2017)
Why you
need QA in
your SLR?
Develop a greater understanding of your studies
and others’ results.
Distinguish between good-quality and poor-
quality studies.
More likely to draw meaningful conclusions from
the data.
Offer you opportunity to acquire critical
appraisal skill.
Validated SLR checklist often includes it to
evaluate SLR’s quality.
(Boland, Cherry, and Dickson, 2017)
What is quality?
Quality of individual studies Quality of your SLR
The degree to which a study employs measures to
minimize error and bias in its design, conduct, and
analysis. (Khan et al., 2003, p.39)
To check against validated SLR checklist tools
(Boland, Cherry, and Dickson, 2017)
“This is a good quality study”.
Translated into:
• “I am confident that this study’s design, conduct and analysis are
robust to provide results that are credible, trustworthy and
generalizable, and are highly likely to be a true representation of the
results of the tested intervention, phenomenon, or exposure.”
(Boland, Cherry, and Dickson, 2017)
When to do QA
Before data extraction During data extraction After data extraction
• When you intend to exclude
poor quality studies in your SLR
NA • You will be blind towards the
quality of individual studies
when extracting data, and your
report is likely to be biased.
• Your greater familiarity with
pooled studies can help you
answer QA questions.
(Boland, Cherry, and Dickson, 2017)
Main elements of QA
Element/Bias type What is it Significance
Selection bias Is the sample representative of the population? Generalizability, transferability
Allocation bias How participants get assigned to treatment group? Any human that
influences or interferes such allocation?
Types of design influence such allocation strategy. The stronger the design,
the less bias from allocation to treatment.
Performance bias Is anyone aware of the treatment or made blinded?
(participants, intervention providers, study investigators)
Can such awareness or blindness cause bias in the study?
Detection bias Is anyone aware of the treatment or made blinded?
(people who measure the outcome)
Attrition bias Proportion of participants who stopped the treatment either by self
dropout or withdrawal by the study.
Weaken the generalizability, give insight to the compliance rates, treatment
groups inequality due to participant size change
Reporting bias Are all outcomes stated to be measured actually reported despite its being
beneficial/favorable or not to the authors? Are some results measured
post hoc for the sake of enhancing favorable outcomes?
Reasons that lead to the failure of reporting all stated outcomes need to be
provided, the treatment appears more favorable than it really is
Confounders Participants’ characteristics are similar across all treatments?
(gender, age, health status, social status, etc.)
Participants should be equally balanced otherwise there is a risk that results
are biased in favor of one group than the other.
Concurrent or subsequent intervention Was any other treatment received by participants beside the study
intervention?
Participants should be treated in the same way to reduce the risk of other
effects, which weakens the study intervention’s effect.
Analysis Were the data for all participants included in final analysis even whose
withdrew ones?
If there are data missing for a number of participants and these data are not
considered, published results will not properly reflect the results of the
study.
Funding bias Who funded the study? Funders may want your study to favor positive outcomes instead of negative
outcomes.
QA tools ask questions about bias. Bias types are many. Assessment of
risk of bias covers at least six bias as colored in red in the table below
according to EUnetHTA (2015)
(Boland, Cherry, and Dickson, 2017)
Selection bias
Is the sample representative of the population?
Duckling image from: https://pixabay.com/illustrations/ptak-brzydkie-kacz%C4%85tko-bajki-2468019/
Treatment Group: Ducks are fed with only company A’s
duck food
Control Group: Ducks are fed with usual farm-food
Allocation bias
How participants get assigned to treatment group?
Image by Clker-Free-Vector-Images from Pixabay
Image by ChaminaGallery from Pixabay
“I am eating healthy food.
I will run more to get fit!”
“I need to give special
care to this fat duck
because the
investigators said it is
the most important
duck.”
“Need to feed this fat
duck from treatment
group better.”
Performance bias
Is anyone aware of the treatment or made blinded? (participants, intervention providers, study investigators)
The Hawthorne Effect/Observer Effect
Image by Clker-Free-Vector-Images from Pixabay
“This fat duck’s performance is indeed better than other ducks!”
Detection bias
Is anyone aware of the treatment or made blinded? (people who measure the outcome)
Attrition bias
Proportion of participants who stopped the treatment either by self dropout or withdrawal by the study.
Reporting bias
Are all outcomes stated to be measured actually reported despite its being beneficial/favorable or not to the
authors? Are some results measured post hoc for the sake of enhancing favorable outcomes?
Control Group: Ducks are fed with usual
farm-food
Confounders
Participants’ characteristics are similar across all treatments? (gender, age, health status, social status, etc.)
Treatment group
Control group
OR
QA steps in SLR
1. Note the design(s) of your included studies.
2. Identify the type(s) of QA tool(s) to suit your review.
3. Choose the appropriate QA tool(s).
4. Carry out QA using the appropriate tool(s).
5. Tabulate and summarize results of your QA.
6. Think about how your QA results might impact on the conclusions
and recommendations of your SLR.
(Boland, Cherry, and Dickson, 2017)
It is the study design that guide your choice of
QA tool, not the review topic area.
(Boland, Cherry, and Dickson, 2017, p.112)
Strength Level Design Randomization Control
High Level 1 RCT Yes Yes
Meta-analysis of level 1 studies with homogeneous results No No
Level 2 Prospective cohort study (comparative, therapeutic) No Yes
Meta-analysis of level 1 or level 2 studies with heterogeneous
results
No No
Level 3 Retrospective cohort study No Yes
Case control study No Yes
Meta analysis of level 3 studies No No
Level 4 Case series No No
Low Level 5 Case report No No
Expert opinion No No
Personal observation No No
The strength of the experimental design is therefore largely reliant on 4 factors: Randomization, Control Groups, Sample Size, and Generalizability.
Different study designs: Levels of evidence
https://www.hydroassoc.org/research-101-levels-of-evidence-in-hydrocephalus-clinical-research-studies/
RCT Randomized Controlled Trial
https://images.app.goo.gl/DsEvBuQTPJt5XZFD8
Non-randomized studies (NRS)
e.g., Each participant is assigned to a treatment group based on the previous participant’s assignment.
https://images.app.goo.gl/chfsWhrDCLU63Mnn8
Cohort study (prospective comparative study or retrospective cohort study)
https://images.app.goo.gl/jwsJcGd4zUeste2QA https://images.app.goo.gl/zyZ9R2WqETHFbGXC8
Case-control
A group of participants with a
particular conditions are
matched for age and other
characteristics with a control
group of participants who do
not have the conditions.
https://images.app.goo.gl/qpDvU3mfhchGXx6a8
Case series A person or (series of people) who has been given a similar
treatment is followed for a specific time period.
https://images.app.goo.gl/YKr9n7YZ56FN7zwP6
Cross-sectional Data are collected from a number of people or other sources
(e.g., databases) at one point in time.
https://images.app.goo.gl/rVqGvD9yGgPuZ5gDA
Levels of
evidence
https://images.app.goo.gl/47CKR2gHipdRq1qS6
QA steps in SLR
1. Note the design(s) of your included studies.
2. Identify the type(s) of QA tool(s) to suit your review.
3. Choose the appropriate QA tool(s).
4. Carry out QA using the appropriate tool(s).
5. Tabulate and summarize results of your QA.
6. Think about how your QA results might impact on the conclusions
and recommendations of your SLR.
(Boland, Cherry, and Dickson, 2017)
QA tools
• ROBINS-I tool or previously known as ACROBAT-NRSI (A Cochrane Risk of Bias
Assessment Tool)
• the Berger/ISPOR questionnaire
• the Cowley checklist
• the Downs-Black checklist
• EPHPP (Effective Public Health Practice Project Quality Assessment Tool)
• the GRACE checklist (Good ReseArch for Comparative Effectiveness)
• MINORS (Methodological Index for Non-randomised Studies)
• NOS (Newcastle-Ottawa Scale)
• the Reisch-Tyson checklist
• RoBANS (Risk of Bias Assessment Tool for Non-randomised Studies)
• TFCPS (Task Force on Community Preventive Services)
(EUnetHTA, 2015)
QA tools Items Year Applicable study designs
ROBINS-I tool or previously known as ACROBAT-NRSI (A Cochrane Risk of Bias
Assessment Tool)
22-29 2014 NRS (incl. cohort studies + case-control studies),
RCT
Berger/ISPOR questionnaire 33
Cowley checklist 13 1995 NRS, RCT, uncontrolled case series
Downs-Black checklist 27 1998 NRS, RCT
EPHPP (Effective Public Health Practice Project Quality Assessment Tool)
GRACE checklist (Good ReseArch for Comparative Effectiveness) 11
MINORS (Methodological Index for Non-randomised Studies) 12 NRS, RCT
NOS (Newcastle-Ottawa Scale) 8 NRS
Reisch-Tyson checklist 57 1989 Any study design
RoBANS (Risk of Bias Assessment Tool for Non-randomised Studies) 8 2013 NRS (not to non-comparative studies)
TFCPS (Task Force on Community Preventive Services) 26+23 NRS, RCT
Thomas 21 (no date) Any study design
Zaza et al. 22 2000 Any study design
Critical appraisal skills program (CASP) 2013 NRS, RCT, SLR
Centre for reviews and dissemination guidance (health care studies) x 2009 SLR guideline, guides to criteria important in the
assessment of studies
Joanna Briggs Institute (health care studies) x 2014 SLR guideline, , a set of appraisal tools for a range
of study designs
Social care institute for excellence (SCIE) x 2010 SLR guideline, minimum generic criteria for
assessing quality of primary research.
(EUnetHTA, 2015; Boland, Cherry, & Dickson, 2017)
Bias domains
coverage by
tool
(EUnetHTA, 2015)
QA steps in SLR
1. Note the design(s) of your included studies.
2. Identify the type(s) of QA tool(s) to suit your review.
3. Choose the appropriate QA tool(s).
4. Carry out QA using the appropriate tool(s).
5. Tabulate and summarize results of your QA.
6. Think about how your QA results might impact on the conclusions
and recommendations of your SLR.
(Boland, Cherry, and Dickson, 2017)
Peterson, Welch, Losos, & Tugwell, (2011)
Peterson, Welch, Losos, & Tugwell, (2011)
References
• Boland, A., Cherry, G., & Dickson, R. (Eds.). (2017). Doing a
systematic review: A student's guide. Sage.
• EUnetHTA. (2015). WP: Internal validity of non-randomised
studies (nrs) on interventions, 2015.
• Peterson, J., Welch, V., Losos, M., & Tugwell, P. J. O. O. H. R. I.
(2011). The Newcastle-Ottawa scale (NOS) for assessing the
quality of nonrandomised studies in meta-analyses. Ottawa:
Ottawa Hospital Research Institute.

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Quality assessment in systematic literature review

  • 1. Quality assessment in SLR Systematic Literature Review Workshop (SLRW) Dr. Jingjing Lin Assistant Professor Centre of IT-based Education Toyohashi University of Technology lin.jingjing.qc@tut.jp
  • 2. Don't judge a book by its cover. (English idiom) Do not take published studies at face value. (Boland, Cherry, and Dickson, 2017, p.109)
  • 3. Which side are you on? • It is published in Nature! It must be a good quality study. I have no doubt of it. • It is published in Nature! But the sample is rather small than usual, I doubt its generalizability. (Boland, Cherry, and Dickson, 2017)
  • 4. Why you need QA in your SLR? Develop a greater understanding of your studies and others’ results. Distinguish between good-quality and poor- quality studies. More likely to draw meaningful conclusions from the data. Offer you opportunity to acquire critical appraisal skill. Validated SLR checklist often includes it to evaluate SLR’s quality. (Boland, Cherry, and Dickson, 2017)
  • 5. What is quality? Quality of individual studies Quality of your SLR The degree to which a study employs measures to minimize error and bias in its design, conduct, and analysis. (Khan et al., 2003, p.39) To check against validated SLR checklist tools (Boland, Cherry, and Dickson, 2017)
  • 6. “This is a good quality study”. Translated into: • “I am confident that this study’s design, conduct and analysis are robust to provide results that are credible, trustworthy and generalizable, and are highly likely to be a true representation of the results of the tested intervention, phenomenon, or exposure.” (Boland, Cherry, and Dickson, 2017)
  • 7. When to do QA Before data extraction During data extraction After data extraction • When you intend to exclude poor quality studies in your SLR NA • You will be blind towards the quality of individual studies when extracting data, and your report is likely to be biased. • Your greater familiarity with pooled studies can help you answer QA questions. (Boland, Cherry, and Dickson, 2017)
  • 8. Main elements of QA Element/Bias type What is it Significance Selection bias Is the sample representative of the population? Generalizability, transferability Allocation bias How participants get assigned to treatment group? Any human that influences or interferes such allocation? Types of design influence such allocation strategy. The stronger the design, the less bias from allocation to treatment. Performance bias Is anyone aware of the treatment or made blinded? (participants, intervention providers, study investigators) Can such awareness or blindness cause bias in the study? Detection bias Is anyone aware of the treatment or made blinded? (people who measure the outcome) Attrition bias Proportion of participants who stopped the treatment either by self dropout or withdrawal by the study. Weaken the generalizability, give insight to the compliance rates, treatment groups inequality due to participant size change Reporting bias Are all outcomes stated to be measured actually reported despite its being beneficial/favorable or not to the authors? Are some results measured post hoc for the sake of enhancing favorable outcomes? Reasons that lead to the failure of reporting all stated outcomes need to be provided, the treatment appears more favorable than it really is Confounders Participants’ characteristics are similar across all treatments? (gender, age, health status, social status, etc.) Participants should be equally balanced otherwise there is a risk that results are biased in favor of one group than the other. Concurrent or subsequent intervention Was any other treatment received by participants beside the study intervention? Participants should be treated in the same way to reduce the risk of other effects, which weakens the study intervention’s effect. Analysis Were the data for all participants included in final analysis even whose withdrew ones? If there are data missing for a number of participants and these data are not considered, published results will not properly reflect the results of the study. Funding bias Who funded the study? Funders may want your study to favor positive outcomes instead of negative outcomes. QA tools ask questions about bias. Bias types are many. Assessment of risk of bias covers at least six bias as colored in red in the table below according to EUnetHTA (2015) (Boland, Cherry, and Dickson, 2017)
  • 9. Selection bias Is the sample representative of the population? Duckling image from: https://pixabay.com/illustrations/ptak-brzydkie-kacz%C4%85tko-bajki-2468019/
  • 10. Treatment Group: Ducks are fed with only company A’s duck food Control Group: Ducks are fed with usual farm-food Allocation bias How participants get assigned to treatment group?
  • 11. Image by Clker-Free-Vector-Images from Pixabay Image by ChaminaGallery from Pixabay “I am eating healthy food. I will run more to get fit!” “I need to give special care to this fat duck because the investigators said it is the most important duck.” “Need to feed this fat duck from treatment group better.” Performance bias Is anyone aware of the treatment or made blinded? (participants, intervention providers, study investigators) The Hawthorne Effect/Observer Effect
  • 12. Image by Clker-Free-Vector-Images from Pixabay “This fat duck’s performance is indeed better than other ducks!” Detection bias Is anyone aware of the treatment or made blinded? (people who measure the outcome)
  • 13. Attrition bias Proportion of participants who stopped the treatment either by self dropout or withdrawal by the study.
  • 14. Reporting bias Are all outcomes stated to be measured actually reported despite its being beneficial/favorable or not to the authors? Are some results measured post hoc for the sake of enhancing favorable outcomes? Control Group: Ducks are fed with usual farm-food
  • 15. Confounders Participants’ characteristics are similar across all treatments? (gender, age, health status, social status, etc.) Treatment group Control group OR
  • 16. QA steps in SLR 1. Note the design(s) of your included studies. 2. Identify the type(s) of QA tool(s) to suit your review. 3. Choose the appropriate QA tool(s). 4. Carry out QA using the appropriate tool(s). 5. Tabulate and summarize results of your QA. 6. Think about how your QA results might impact on the conclusions and recommendations of your SLR. (Boland, Cherry, and Dickson, 2017)
  • 17. It is the study design that guide your choice of QA tool, not the review topic area. (Boland, Cherry, and Dickson, 2017, p.112)
  • 18. Strength Level Design Randomization Control High Level 1 RCT Yes Yes Meta-analysis of level 1 studies with homogeneous results No No Level 2 Prospective cohort study (comparative, therapeutic) No Yes Meta-analysis of level 1 or level 2 studies with heterogeneous results No No Level 3 Retrospective cohort study No Yes Case control study No Yes Meta analysis of level 3 studies No No Level 4 Case series No No Low Level 5 Case report No No Expert opinion No No Personal observation No No The strength of the experimental design is therefore largely reliant on 4 factors: Randomization, Control Groups, Sample Size, and Generalizability. Different study designs: Levels of evidence https://www.hydroassoc.org/research-101-levels-of-evidence-in-hydrocephalus-clinical-research-studies/
  • 19. RCT Randomized Controlled Trial https://images.app.goo.gl/DsEvBuQTPJt5XZFD8
  • 20. Non-randomized studies (NRS) e.g., Each participant is assigned to a treatment group based on the previous participant’s assignment. https://images.app.goo.gl/chfsWhrDCLU63Mnn8
  • 21. Cohort study (prospective comparative study or retrospective cohort study) https://images.app.goo.gl/jwsJcGd4zUeste2QA https://images.app.goo.gl/zyZ9R2WqETHFbGXC8
  • 22. Case-control A group of participants with a particular conditions are matched for age and other characteristics with a control group of participants who do not have the conditions. https://images.app.goo.gl/qpDvU3mfhchGXx6a8
  • 23. Case series A person or (series of people) who has been given a similar treatment is followed for a specific time period. https://images.app.goo.gl/YKr9n7YZ56FN7zwP6
  • 24. Cross-sectional Data are collected from a number of people or other sources (e.g., databases) at one point in time. https://images.app.goo.gl/rVqGvD9yGgPuZ5gDA
  • 26. QA steps in SLR 1. Note the design(s) of your included studies. 2. Identify the type(s) of QA tool(s) to suit your review. 3. Choose the appropriate QA tool(s). 4. Carry out QA using the appropriate tool(s). 5. Tabulate and summarize results of your QA. 6. Think about how your QA results might impact on the conclusions and recommendations of your SLR. (Boland, Cherry, and Dickson, 2017)
  • 27. QA tools • ROBINS-I tool or previously known as ACROBAT-NRSI (A Cochrane Risk of Bias Assessment Tool) • the Berger/ISPOR questionnaire • the Cowley checklist • the Downs-Black checklist • EPHPP (Effective Public Health Practice Project Quality Assessment Tool) • the GRACE checklist (Good ReseArch for Comparative Effectiveness) • MINORS (Methodological Index for Non-randomised Studies) • NOS (Newcastle-Ottawa Scale) • the Reisch-Tyson checklist • RoBANS (Risk of Bias Assessment Tool for Non-randomised Studies) • TFCPS (Task Force on Community Preventive Services) (EUnetHTA, 2015)
  • 28. QA tools Items Year Applicable study designs ROBINS-I tool or previously known as ACROBAT-NRSI (A Cochrane Risk of Bias Assessment Tool) 22-29 2014 NRS (incl. cohort studies + case-control studies), RCT Berger/ISPOR questionnaire 33 Cowley checklist 13 1995 NRS, RCT, uncontrolled case series Downs-Black checklist 27 1998 NRS, RCT EPHPP (Effective Public Health Practice Project Quality Assessment Tool) GRACE checklist (Good ReseArch for Comparative Effectiveness) 11 MINORS (Methodological Index for Non-randomised Studies) 12 NRS, RCT NOS (Newcastle-Ottawa Scale) 8 NRS Reisch-Tyson checklist 57 1989 Any study design RoBANS (Risk of Bias Assessment Tool for Non-randomised Studies) 8 2013 NRS (not to non-comparative studies) TFCPS (Task Force on Community Preventive Services) 26+23 NRS, RCT Thomas 21 (no date) Any study design Zaza et al. 22 2000 Any study design Critical appraisal skills program (CASP) 2013 NRS, RCT, SLR Centre for reviews and dissemination guidance (health care studies) x 2009 SLR guideline, guides to criteria important in the assessment of studies Joanna Briggs Institute (health care studies) x 2014 SLR guideline, , a set of appraisal tools for a range of study designs Social care institute for excellence (SCIE) x 2010 SLR guideline, minimum generic criteria for assessing quality of primary research. (EUnetHTA, 2015; Boland, Cherry, & Dickson, 2017)
  • 30. QA steps in SLR 1. Note the design(s) of your included studies. 2. Identify the type(s) of QA tool(s) to suit your review. 3. Choose the appropriate QA tool(s). 4. Carry out QA using the appropriate tool(s). 5. Tabulate and summarize results of your QA. 6. Think about how your QA results might impact on the conclusions and recommendations of your SLR. (Boland, Cherry, and Dickson, 2017)
  • 31. Peterson, Welch, Losos, & Tugwell, (2011)
  • 32. Peterson, Welch, Losos, & Tugwell, (2011)
  • 33. References • Boland, A., Cherry, G., & Dickson, R. (Eds.). (2017). Doing a systematic review: A student's guide. Sage. • EUnetHTA. (2015). WP: Internal validity of non-randomised studies (nrs) on interventions, 2015. • Peterson, J., Welch, V., Losos, M., & Tugwell, P. J. O. O. H. R. I. (2011). The Newcastle-Ottawa scale (NOS) for assessing the quality of nonrandomised studies in meta-analyses. Ottawa: Ottawa Hospital Research Institute.