1. Title
Essential elements
Identify the report as a systematic review in the title.
Report an informative title that provides key information about the main objective or question that the review addresses. For reviews of interventions, this usually includes the population and the intervention(s) that the review addresses.
Additional elements
Consider providing additional information in the title, such as the method of analysis used (for example, “a systematic review with meta-analysis”), the designs of included studies (for example, “a systematic review of randomised trials”), or an indication that the review is an update of an existing review or a continually updated (“living”) systematic review.
Explanation
Inclusion of “systematic review” in the title facilitates identification by potential users (patients, healthcare providers, policy makers, etc) and appropriate indexing in databases. Terms such as “review,” “literature review,” “evidence synthesis,” or “knowledge synthesis” are not recommended because they do not distinguish systematic and non-systematic approaches. We also discourage using the terms “systematic review” and “meta-analysis” interchangeably because a systematic review refers to the entire set of processes used to identify, select, and synthesise evidence, whereas meta-analysis refers only to the statistical synthesis. Furthermore, a meta-analysis can be done outside the context of a systematic review (for example, when researchers meta-analyse results from a limited set of studies that they have conducted).
Example
Comparison of the therapeutic effects of rivaroxaban versus warfarin in antiphospholipid syndrome: a systematic review1
Training
The UK EQUATOR Centre runs training on how to write using reporting guidelines.
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