| Title | Identifying observational studies of surgical interventions in MEDLINE and EMBASE. |
| Publication Type | Journal Article |
| Year of Publication | 2006 |
| Authors | Fraser C, Murray A, Burr J |
| Journal | BMC medical research methodology |
| Volume | 6 |
| Pagination | 41 |
| Date Published | 2006 |
| ISSN | 1471-2288 |
| Keywords | Databases, Bibliographic; Efficiency; Evidence-Based Medicine; Humans; Information Storage and Retrieval; MEDLINE; Quality Control; Sensitivity and Specificity; Surgical Procedures, Operative; Technology Assessment, Biomedical |
| Abstract | BACKGROUND: Health technology assessments of surgical interventions frequently require the inclusion of non-randomised evidence. Literature search strategies employed to identify this evidence often exclude a methodological component because of uncertainty surrounding the use of appropriate search terms. This can result in the retrieval of a large number of irrelevant records. Methodological filters would help to minimise this, making literature searching more efficient. METHODS: An objective approach was employed to develop MEDLINE and EMBASE filters, using a reference standard derived from screening the results of an electronic literature search that contained only subject-related terms. Candidate terms for MEDLINE (N = 37) and EMBASE (N = 35) were derived from examination of the records of the reference standard. The filters were validated on two sets of studies that had been included in previous health technology assessments. RESULTS: The final filters were highly sensitive (MEDLINE 99.5%, EMBASE 100%, MEDLINE/EMBASE combined 100%) with precision ranging between 16.7%-21.1%, specificity 35.3%-43.5%, and a reduction in retrievals of over 30%. Against the validation standards, the individual filters retrieved 85.2%-100% of records. In combination, however, the MEDLINE and EMBASE filters retrieved 100% against both validation standards with a reduction in retrieved records of 28.4% and 30.1% CONCLUSION: The MEDLINE and EMBASE filters were highly sensitive and substantially reduced the number of records retrieved, indicating that they are useful tools for efficient literature searching. |
| DOI | 10.1186/1471-2288-6-41 |
| Alternate Journal | BMC Med Res Methodol |