20a. Results of syntheses – Summary of studies
For each synthesis, briefly summarise the characteristics and risk of bias among contributing studies.
Essential elements
Provide a brief summary of the characteristics and risk of bias among studies contributing to each synthesis (meta-analysis or other). The summary should focus only on study characteristics that help in interpreting the results (especially those that suggest the evidence addresses only a restricted part of the review question, or indirectly addresses the question). If the same set of studies contribute to more than one synthesis, or if the same risk of bias issues are relevant across studies for different syntheses, such a summary need be provided once only.
Indicate which studies were included in each synthesis (such as by listing each study in a forest plot or table or citing studies in the text).
Explanation
Many systematic review reports include narrative summaries of the characteristics and risk of bias across all included studies.1 However, such general summaries are not useful when the studies contributing to each synthesis vary, and particularly when there are many studies. For example, one meta-analysis might include three studies of participants aged 30 years on average, whereas another meta-analysis might include 10 studies of participants aged 60 years on average; in this case, knowing the mean age per synthesis is more meaningful than the overall mean age across all 13 studies. Providing a brief summary of the characteristics and risk of bias among studies contributing to each synthesis (meta-analysis or other) should help readers understand the applicability and risk of bias in the synthesised result. Furthermore, a summary at the level of the synthesis is more usable since it obviates the need for readers to refer to multiple sections of the review in order to interpret results.2
Example
“Nine randomized controlled trials (RCTs) directly compared delirium incidence between haloperidol and placebo groups [9 studies cited]. These RCTs enrolled 3,408 patients in both surgical and medical intensive care and non-intensive care unit settings and used a variety of validated delirium detection instruments. Five of the trials were low risk of bias [5 studies cited], three had unclear risk of bias [3 studies cited], and one had high risk of bias owing to lack of blinding and allocation concealment [1 study cited]. Intravenous haloperidol was administered in all except two trials; in those two exceptions, oral doses were given [two studies cited]. These nine trials were pooled, as they each identified new onset of delirium (incidence) within the week after exposure to prophylactic haloperidol or placebo.”3
Training
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