2. Abstract
What to write
Structured summary of study design, methods, results and conclusions (for specific guidance, see STARD for Abstracts).
Explanation
Readers use abstracts to decide whether they should retrieve the full study report and invest time in reading it. In cases where access to the full study report cannot be obtained or where time is limited, it is conceivable that clinical decisions are based on the information provided in abstracts only.
In two recent literature surveys, abstracts of diagnostic accuracy studies published in high-impact journals or presented at an international scientific conference were found insufficiently informative, because key information about the research question, study methods, study results and the implications of findings were frequently missing.[1;2
Informative abstracts help readers to quickly appraise critical elements of study validity (risk of bias) and applicability of study findings to their clinical setting (generalisability). Structured abstracts, with separate headings for objectives, methods, results and interpretation, allow readers to find essential information more easily.3
Building on STARD 2015, the newly developed STARD for Abstracts provides a list of essential items that should be included in journal and conference abstracts of diagnostic accuracy studies.
Example
Training
The UK EQUATOR Centre runs training on how to write using reporting guidelines.
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