Author: Yu, Yang; Shi, Qianling; Zheng, Peng; Gao, Lei; Li, Haiyuan; Tao, Pengxian; Gu, Baohong; Wang, Dengfeng; Chen, Hao
Title: Assessment of the quality of systematic reviews on COVIDâ€19: A comparative study of previous coronavirus outbreaks Cord-id: nakxfhxk Document date: 2020_4_28
ID: nakxfhxk
Snippet: Several systematic reviews (SRs) have been conducted on the COVIDâ€19 outbreak, which together with the SRs on previous coronavirus outbreaks, form important sources of evidence for clinical decision and policy making. Here, we investigated the methodological quality of SRs on COVIDâ€19, severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), and Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS). Online searches were performed to obtain SRs on COVIDâ€19, SARS, and MERS. The methodological quality of the included SRs
Document: Several systematic reviews (SRs) have been conducted on the COVIDâ€19 outbreak, which together with the SRs on previous coronavirus outbreaks, form important sources of evidence for clinical decision and policy making. Here, we investigated the methodological quality of SRs on COVIDâ€19, severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), and Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS). Online searches were performed to obtain SRs on COVIDâ€19, SARS, and MERS. The methodological quality of the included SRs was assessed using the AMSTARâ€2 tool. Descriptive statistics were used to present the data. In total, of 49 SRs that were finally included in our study, 17, 16, and 16 SRs were specifically on COVIDâ€19, MERS, and SARS, respectively. The growth rate of SRs on COVIDâ€19 was the highest (4.54/month) presently. Of the included SRs, 6, 12, and 31 SRs were of moderate, low, and critically low quality, respectively. SRs on SARS showed the optimum quality among the SRs on the three diseases. Subgroup analyses showed that the SR topic (P < .001), the involvement of a methodologist (P < .001), and funding support (P = .046) were significantly associated with the methodological quality of the SR. According to the adherence scores, adherence to AMSTARâ€2 items sequentially decreased in SRs on SARS, MERS, and COVIDâ€19. The methodological quality of most SRs on coronavirus outbreaks is unsatisfactory, and those on COVIDâ€19 have higher risks of poor quality, despite the rapid actions taken to conduct SRs. The quality of SRs should be improved in the future. Readers must exercise caution in accepting and using the results of these SRs.
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