Background
It is important that systematic reviews (SRs) are up‐to‐date, otherwise they cannot be relied upon to guide decision‐making in practice and policy. Our aim was to investigate epidemiological, descriptive and reporting characteristics of a cross‐section of recently published updates of SRs.
Methods
A SR update was defined as a new edition of a SR, either published by the same or new authors. We searched PubMed for SR updates published from January 01, 2016 to January 22, 2018 and included a random sample of n = 100 non‐Cochrane updates of SRs on interventions reported in English.
Results
Most SR updates had a corresponding author from the United Kingdom, United States, or Canada (in total 48/100) and dealt with nonpharmacological interventions (63/100). The SR updates were published a median of 5 years (interquartile range [IQR] 3‐7) after the previous SR and included a median of 19 (IQR 9‐28) studies. 31/100 SR updates reported that the conclusion had changed since the previous version. Only 51/100 SR updates used the term “update” in the title and none reported having based the decision to update the previous SR on an existing method/decision tool. The number of newly included studies and participants and the number of studies and participants included in/from the previous SR were often not reported.
Conclusions
The included non‐Cochrane updates were frequently missing important information that would be expected to be present in a SR update. Thus, structured and detailed reporting guidance specific to SR updates is needed. It should focus particularly on appropriate labeling and justification of updates, and how to incorporate information regarding the previous SR.