📄 Extracted Text (447 words)
What this says is that for published studies:
-57% need updating (are outmoded) within 5.5 years
-23% in 2 years
-15% in 1 year and
-7% were out-of-date by the time they were published
The hubris of us all !!!
23% within 1: Ann Intern Med. 2007 Aug 21;147(4):224-33. Epub 2007 Jul 16.
Links
Comment in:
Ann Intern Med. 2007 Aug 21;147(4):273-4.
How quickly do systematic reviews go out of
date? A survival analysis.
Shojania KG, Sampson M, Ansari MT, 3i 3, Doucette S, Moher D.
Ottawa Health Research Institute, University of Ottawa, Chalmers Research
Group, and Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario Research Institute, Ottawa,
Ontario, Canada. [email protected]
BACKGROUND: Systematic reviews are often advocated as the best source of
evidence to guide clinical decisions and health care policy, yet we know little
about the extent to which they require updating. OBJECTIVE: To estimate the
average time to changes in evidence that are sufficiently important to warrant
updating systematic reviews. DESIGN: Survival analysis of 100 quantitative
systematic reviews. Sample: Systematic reviews published from 1995 to 2005
and indexed in ACP Journal Club. Eligible reviews evaluated a specific drug or
class of drug, device, or procedure and included only randomized or quasi-
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randomized, controlled trials. MEASUREMENTS: Quantitative signals for
updating were changes in statistical significance or relative changes in effect
magnitude of at least 50% involving 1 of the primary outcomes of the original
systematic review or any mortality outcome. Qualitative signals included
substantial differences in characterizations of effectiveness, new information
about harm, and caveats about the previously reported findings that would
affect clinical decision making. RESULTS: The cohort of 100 systematic
reviews included a median of 13 studies and 2663 participants per review. A
qualitative or quantitative signal for updating occurred for 57% of reviews
(95% CI, 47% to 67%). Median duration of survival free of a signal for
updating was 5.5 years (CI, 4.6 to 7.6 years). However, a signal occurred
within 2 years for 23% of reviews and within 1 year for 15%. In 7%, a signal
had already occurred at the time of publication. Only 4% of reviews had a
signal within 1 year of the end of the reported search period; 11% had a
signal within 2 years of the search. Shorter survival was associated with
cardiovascular topics (hazard ratio, 2.70 [CI, 1.36 to 5.34)) and
heterogeneity in the original review (hazard ratio, 2.15 [CI, 1.12 to 4.11]).
LIMITATION: Judgments of the need for updating were made without
involving content experts. CONCLUSION: In a cohort of high-quality
systematic reviews directly relevant to clinical practice, signals for updating
occurred frequently and within a relatively short time.
PMID: 17638714 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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