10
Most read
12
Most read
14
Most read
Introduction to systematic literature review
Nicholas Ngwili, ILRI
Online Training on Systematic Literature Review, ILRI Nairobi, 5-6 May 2020
Learning outcomes at the end of the
training
 Describe what is SLR and their rationale
 Differentiate SLR and traditional reviews
 Formulate the research question and write a SLR
protocol- we will discuss a few examples
 Carry out all the stages of a SLR – 6 stages
What is SLR
A review prepared using a systematic approach to
minimizing biases and random errors which is
documented in a material and methods section in
an a priori protocol. This is what makes a review
systematic
SLRs
 Require comprehensive search of all evidence
 Systematic reviews are observational studies – therefore also
prone to bias
 Should apply the same level of rigour to reviewing research
evidence as is used producing that research evidence in the
first place.
Def’ continued…
 A systematic review may, or may not, include a meta-analysis:
a statistical analysis of the results, which generally aim to
produce a single estimate of an intervention effect
 Represented in a forest plot
 The examination of variability or heterogeneity in study
results is also a critical outcome
History
 In 1975 under the term 'meta analysis'. The phrase was
coined by Gene Glass who conducted syntheses in the areas
of psychotherapy (Smith, Glass and Miller 1980) and class size
(Glass and Smith 1979).
 Archie Cochrane in 1972 urged health practitioners to practice
evidence-based medicine
History
 In 1987, the year before Cochrane died, he referred
systematic review of randomised controlled trials (RCT's) a
real milestone in the history of randomised trials and in the
evaluation of care, and suggested that other specialties
should copy the methods used
 The Cochrane Collaboration in 1993- international network of
researchers, academics, practitioners and users
 The Campbell collaboration adapted Cochrane methodology
to bring the same quality of systematic evidence to issues of
broader public policy.
Why SLR?
 Researchers cannot read all relevant literature!
 Lack of time, resources and skills-find, appraise and interpret
 Often lots of studies sometimes with conflicting findings
 Systematic reviews summarise the evidence
 For relevant questions about important uncertainties in a
particular topic
- Systematic reviews are very powerful tools but are poorly
understood
Traditional reviews vs SLR
Traditional Literatures vs SLR
Traditional reviews Systematic literature review
 Are descriptive,
 Involve a non- systematic search
of literature
 Are selective – one chooses to
read what is available, is of
interest
 Can sometimes be confusing
where similar studies provide
different results and conclusions.
 It is prone to bias.
 Involve using a clear, well defined
methodology to summarize past
research, with a focus to reduce
bias.
 May include a meta- analysis
where data from different
studies is pooled together an a
summary provided
 Rich in data to inform further
research or methodology.
Characteristics of systematic reviews
o A clearly stated set of objectives with pre-defined eligibility
criteria for studies;
o An explicit, reproducible methodology;
o A systematic search that attempts to identify all studies that
meet the eligibility criteria;
o An assessment of the validity of the findings of the included
studies, for example through the assessment of risk of bias; and
o A systematic presentation, and synthesis, of the characteristics
and findings of the included studies
Stages in SLR
Define your research question and inclusion criteria
Carry out comprehensive, systematic searches
Select eligible studies
Extract data
Assess risk of bias in included studies
Synthesise the evidence
The protocol- defines the process in detail
 Have protocol written down and possibly reviewed
 Define question and search strategies
 Define Inclusion/exclusion criteria
 Quality control
 Extract data: primary outcomes, populations and interventions
 Protocols can be registered;
https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero/
Types of SLR
o Comparative Effectiveness Research -what works best
o Diagnostic test accuracy
o Prognosis
o EPOC and Health systems - Effective Practice and Organisation of Care
o Qualitative research
o Cost effectiveness and health economics
o Genomics
o Social science and the Campbell Collaboration
Comparative Effectiveness Research
• Randomised controlled trials
• Non-randomised and pseudo-randomised
• Observational studies - no allocation but with a comparator or
control group
• Large outcome studies or real world data - big data
• Case series - sequential or selected
Summary; source(https://croatia.cochrane.org/news/how-
make-systematic-literature-review-basics-methodology-and-practical-steps )
Reading materials
○ http://handbook.cochrane.org/
– Cochrane handbook of systematic reviews of interventions Eds
Higgins, Green
This presentation is licensed for use under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence.
better lives through livestock
ilri.org
ILRI thanks all donors and organizations which globally support its work through their contributions
to the CGIAR Trust Fund

More Related Content

PPTX
Hisrorical evelotion and trends in nursing research
PPTX
Ethics in research
PPT
Web of causation of disease
PPSX
Literature review in research
PPTX
Calcium Channel Blockers in Hypertension
PPTX
Systematic review
PPT
Hisrorical evelotion and trends in nursing research
Ethics in research
Web of causation of disease
Literature review in research
Calcium Channel Blockers in Hypertension
Systematic review

What's hot (20)

PPTX
How to conduct systematic literature review
PDF
Systematic Literature Review & Mapping
PPTX
Systematic literature review: An introduction
PDF
Introduction to Systematic Literature Review method
PDF
SYSTEMATIC LITERATURE SEARCH-Alison Kinengyere
PPT
Literature review (1)
PPTX
Research plan final
PDF
Systematic Literature Review
PDF
4. review of literature
PPT
Research methodology
PPTX
How to do a Literature Review
PPT
analysis plan.ppt
PPTX
Literature review
PPTX
The components of research proposal
PDF
Review of literature - systematic review
PPT
Systematic review ppt
PPTX
Review of literature
PPTX
Avoid salami slicing and duplicate publication
PDF
Literature review
PPTX
Citation analysis
How to conduct systematic literature review
Systematic Literature Review & Mapping
Systematic literature review: An introduction
Introduction to Systematic Literature Review method
SYSTEMATIC LITERATURE SEARCH-Alison Kinengyere
Literature review (1)
Research plan final
Systematic Literature Review
4. review of literature
Research methodology
How to do a Literature Review
analysis plan.ppt
Literature review
The components of research proposal
Review of literature - systematic review
Systematic review ppt
Review of literature
Avoid salami slicing and duplicate publication
Literature review
Citation analysis
Ad

Similar to Introduction to systematic literature review (20)

PPTX
SYSTEMATIC REVIEW: A STEP-BY-STEP APPROACH
PPT
MA Talk Temple.ppt
PPT
review of Litt on clinical research and Methodology
PPT
مراجعة الأدبيات المنهجيةsystematic literature review .ppt
PDF
Introduction to Systematic Reviews - Prof Ejaz Khan
PDF
What is a Systematic Review? - Pubrica
PPTX
Systematic reviews at the peak of research designs
PPT
Meta-analysis _systematic rev pharmD.ppt
PDF
Systematic Review-Scoping Review
PPTX
Meta analysis.pptx
PDF
Introduction to Systematic Reviews
PPTX
Developing a Systematic Review Protocol
PDF
Systematic review article and Meta-analysis: Main steps for Successful writin...
DOCX
1. Describe the key differences between a systematic review and a traditional...
PPTX
How to conduct a systematic review
PPTX
Mastering the Review Article: Structure, Strategy & Success
PPTX
systematic review and meta-analysis.pptx
PDF
Research Designed.pdf
PPTX
A practical guide to do primary research on meta analysis methodology - Pubrica
PPTX
Systematic and Scoping Reviews.pptx
SYSTEMATIC REVIEW: A STEP-BY-STEP APPROACH
MA Talk Temple.ppt
review of Litt on clinical research and Methodology
مراجعة الأدبيات المنهجيةsystematic literature review .ppt
Introduction to Systematic Reviews - Prof Ejaz Khan
What is a Systematic Review? - Pubrica
Systematic reviews at the peak of research designs
Meta-analysis _systematic rev pharmD.ppt
Systematic Review-Scoping Review
Meta analysis.pptx
Introduction to Systematic Reviews
Developing a Systematic Review Protocol
Systematic review article and Meta-analysis: Main steps for Successful writin...
1. Describe the key differences between a systematic review and a traditional...
How to conduct a systematic review
Mastering the Review Article: Structure, Strategy & Success
systematic review and meta-analysis.pptx
Research Designed.pdf
A practical guide to do primary research on meta analysis methodology - Pubrica
Systematic and Scoping Reviews.pptx
Ad

More from ILRI (20)

PPTX
How the small-scale low biosecurity sector could be transformed into a more b...
PPTX
Small ruminant keepers’ knowledge, attitudes and practices towards peste des ...
PDF
Small ruminant keepers’ knowledge, attitudes and practices towards peste des ...
PPTX
A training, certification and marketing scheme for informal dairy vendors in ...
PDF
Milk safety and child nutrition impacts of the MoreMilk training, certificati...
PPTX
Preventing the next pandemic: a 12-slide primer on emerging zoonotic diseases
PPTX
Preventing preventable diseases: a 12-slide primer on foodborne disease
PPTX
Preventing a post-antibiotic era: a 12-slide primer on antimicrobial resistance
PPTX
Food safety research in low- and middle-income countries
PPTX
Food safety research LMIC
PPTX
The application of One Health: Observations from eastern and southern Africa
PDF
One Health in action: Perspectives from 10 years in the field
PPTX
Reservoirs of pathogenic Leptospira species in Uganda
PDF
Minyoo ya mbwa
PDF
Parasites in dogs
PDF
Assessing meat microbiological safety and associated handling practices in bu...
PDF
Ecological factors associated with abundance and distribution of mosquito vec...
PPTX
Livestock in the agrifood systems transformation
PDF
Development of a fluorescent RBL reporter system for diagnosis of porcine cys...
PDF
Practices and drivers of antibiotic use in Kenyan smallholder dairy farms
How the small-scale low biosecurity sector could be transformed into a more b...
Small ruminant keepers’ knowledge, attitudes and practices towards peste des ...
Small ruminant keepers’ knowledge, attitudes and practices towards peste des ...
A training, certification and marketing scheme for informal dairy vendors in ...
Milk safety and child nutrition impacts of the MoreMilk training, certificati...
Preventing the next pandemic: a 12-slide primer on emerging zoonotic diseases
Preventing preventable diseases: a 12-slide primer on foodborne disease
Preventing a post-antibiotic era: a 12-slide primer on antimicrobial resistance
Food safety research in low- and middle-income countries
Food safety research LMIC
The application of One Health: Observations from eastern and southern Africa
One Health in action: Perspectives from 10 years in the field
Reservoirs of pathogenic Leptospira species in Uganda
Minyoo ya mbwa
Parasites in dogs
Assessing meat microbiological safety and associated handling practices in bu...
Ecological factors associated with abundance and distribution of mosquito vec...
Livestock in the agrifood systems transformation
Development of a fluorescent RBL reporter system for diagnosis of porcine cys...
Practices and drivers of antibiotic use in Kenyan smallholder dairy farms

Recently uploaded (20)

PPTX
BPharm_Hospital_Organization_Complete_PPT.pptx
PPTX
Presentation1 INTRODUCTION TO ENZYMES.pptx
PDF
Is Earendel a Star Cluster?: Metal-poor Globular Cluster Progenitors at z ∼ 6
PDF
ECG Practice from Passmedicine for MRCP Part 2 2024.pdf
PPT
Enhancing Laboratory Quality Through ISO 15189 Compliance
PPT
Chapter 6 Introductory course Biology Camp
PDF
Integrative Oncology: Merging Conventional and Alternative Approaches (www.k...
PDF
Sustainable Biology- Scopes, Principles of sustainiability, Sustainable Resou...
PPTX
diabetes and its complications nephropathy neuropathy
PDF
Science Form five needed shit SCIENEce so
PPT
Cell Structure Description and Functions
PDF
Micro 4 New.ppt.pdf thesis main microbio
PPTX
Thyroid disorders presentation for MBBS.pptx
PDF
THE-VITAL-ROLE-OF-MITOCHONDRIAL-RESPIRATION-IN-PLANT-GROWTH-AND-DEVELOPMENT.pdf
PDF
Cosmology using numerical relativity - what hapenned before big bang?
PPTX
HAEMATOLOGICAL DISEASES lack of red blood cells, which carry oxygen throughou...
PDF
From Molecular Interactions to Solubility in Deep Eutectic Solvents: Explorin...
PPTX
Platelet disorders - thrombocytopenia.pptx
PPT
Animal tissues, epithelial, muscle, connective, nervous tissue
PPTX
Introduction to Immunology (Unit-1).pptx
BPharm_Hospital_Organization_Complete_PPT.pptx
Presentation1 INTRODUCTION TO ENZYMES.pptx
Is Earendel a Star Cluster?: Metal-poor Globular Cluster Progenitors at z ∼ 6
ECG Practice from Passmedicine for MRCP Part 2 2024.pdf
Enhancing Laboratory Quality Through ISO 15189 Compliance
Chapter 6 Introductory course Biology Camp
Integrative Oncology: Merging Conventional and Alternative Approaches (www.k...
Sustainable Biology- Scopes, Principles of sustainiability, Sustainable Resou...
diabetes and its complications nephropathy neuropathy
Science Form five needed shit SCIENEce so
Cell Structure Description and Functions
Micro 4 New.ppt.pdf thesis main microbio
Thyroid disorders presentation for MBBS.pptx
THE-VITAL-ROLE-OF-MITOCHONDRIAL-RESPIRATION-IN-PLANT-GROWTH-AND-DEVELOPMENT.pdf
Cosmology using numerical relativity - what hapenned before big bang?
HAEMATOLOGICAL DISEASES lack of red blood cells, which carry oxygen throughou...
From Molecular Interactions to Solubility in Deep Eutectic Solvents: Explorin...
Platelet disorders - thrombocytopenia.pptx
Animal tissues, epithelial, muscle, connective, nervous tissue
Introduction to Immunology (Unit-1).pptx

Introduction to systematic literature review

  • 1. Introduction to systematic literature review Nicholas Ngwili, ILRI Online Training on Systematic Literature Review, ILRI Nairobi, 5-6 May 2020
  • 2. Learning outcomes at the end of the training  Describe what is SLR and their rationale  Differentiate SLR and traditional reviews  Formulate the research question and write a SLR protocol- we will discuss a few examples  Carry out all the stages of a SLR – 6 stages
  • 3. What is SLR A review prepared using a systematic approach to minimizing biases and random errors which is documented in a material and methods section in an a priori protocol. This is what makes a review systematic
  • 4. SLRs  Require comprehensive search of all evidence  Systematic reviews are observational studies – therefore also prone to bias  Should apply the same level of rigour to reviewing research evidence as is used producing that research evidence in the first place.
  • 5. Def’ continued…  A systematic review may, or may not, include a meta-analysis: a statistical analysis of the results, which generally aim to produce a single estimate of an intervention effect  Represented in a forest plot  The examination of variability or heterogeneity in study results is also a critical outcome
  • 6. History  In 1975 under the term 'meta analysis'. The phrase was coined by Gene Glass who conducted syntheses in the areas of psychotherapy (Smith, Glass and Miller 1980) and class size (Glass and Smith 1979).  Archie Cochrane in 1972 urged health practitioners to practice evidence-based medicine
  • 7. History  In 1987, the year before Cochrane died, he referred systematic review of randomised controlled trials (RCT's) a real milestone in the history of randomised trials and in the evaluation of care, and suggested that other specialties should copy the methods used  The Cochrane Collaboration in 1993- international network of researchers, academics, practitioners and users  The Campbell collaboration adapted Cochrane methodology to bring the same quality of systematic evidence to issues of broader public policy.
  • 8. Why SLR?  Researchers cannot read all relevant literature!  Lack of time, resources and skills-find, appraise and interpret  Often lots of studies sometimes with conflicting findings  Systematic reviews summarise the evidence  For relevant questions about important uncertainties in a particular topic - Systematic reviews are very powerful tools but are poorly understood
  • 10. Traditional Literatures vs SLR Traditional reviews Systematic literature review  Are descriptive,  Involve a non- systematic search of literature  Are selective – one chooses to read what is available, is of interest  Can sometimes be confusing where similar studies provide different results and conclusions.  It is prone to bias.  Involve using a clear, well defined methodology to summarize past research, with a focus to reduce bias.  May include a meta- analysis where data from different studies is pooled together an a summary provided  Rich in data to inform further research or methodology.
  • 11. Characteristics of systematic reviews o A clearly stated set of objectives with pre-defined eligibility criteria for studies; o An explicit, reproducible methodology; o A systematic search that attempts to identify all studies that meet the eligibility criteria; o An assessment of the validity of the findings of the included studies, for example through the assessment of risk of bias; and o A systematic presentation, and synthesis, of the characteristics and findings of the included studies
  • 12. Stages in SLR Define your research question and inclusion criteria Carry out comprehensive, systematic searches Select eligible studies Extract data Assess risk of bias in included studies Synthesise the evidence
  • 13. The protocol- defines the process in detail  Have protocol written down and possibly reviewed  Define question and search strategies  Define Inclusion/exclusion criteria  Quality control  Extract data: primary outcomes, populations and interventions  Protocols can be registered; https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero/
  • 14. Types of SLR o Comparative Effectiveness Research -what works best o Diagnostic test accuracy o Prognosis o EPOC and Health systems - Effective Practice and Organisation of Care o Qualitative research o Cost effectiveness and health economics o Genomics o Social science and the Campbell Collaboration
  • 15. Comparative Effectiveness Research • Randomised controlled trials • Non-randomised and pseudo-randomised • Observational studies - no allocation but with a comparator or control group • Large outcome studies or real world data - big data • Case series - sequential or selected
  • 17. Reading materials ○ http://handbook.cochrane.org/ – Cochrane handbook of systematic reviews of interventions Eds Higgins, Green
  • 18. This presentation is licensed for use under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence. better lives through livestock ilri.org ILRI thanks all donors and organizations which globally support its work through their contributions to the CGIAR Trust Fund

Editor's Notes

  • #2: There MUST be a CGIAR logo or a CRP logo. You can copy and paste the logo you need from the final slide of this presentation. Then you can delete that final slide   To replace a photo above, copy and paste this link in your browser: http://www.flickr.com/photos/ilri/sets/72157632057087650/detail/   Find a photo you like and the right size, copy and paste it in the block above.