TY - JOUR
T1 - PRISMA harms checklist
T2 - Improving harms reporting in systematic reviews
AU - Zorzela, Liliane
AU - Loke, Yoon K.
AU - Ioannidis, John P.
AU - Golder, Su
AU - Santaguida, Pasqualina
AU - Altman, Douglas G.
AU - Moher, David
AU - Vohra, Sunita
AU - Boon, Heather
AU - Clark, Jocalyn
AU - Derry, Sheena
AU - Gallivan, Jim
AU - Gardiner, Paula
AU - Gøtzsche, Peter
AU - Loder, Elizabeth
AU - Napoli, Maryann
AU - Pilkington, Karen
AU - Shekelle, Paul
AU - Singh, Sonal
AU - Witt, Claudia
AU - Lasserson, Toby
AU - Wu, Taixiang
AU - Shamseer, Larissa
AU - Mulrow, Cynthia
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© BMJ Publishing Group Ltd 2016.
PY - 2016/2/1
Y1 - 2016/2/1
N2 - INTRODUCTION: For any health intervention, accurate knowledge of both benefits and harms is needed. Systematic reviews often compound poor reporting of harms in primary studies by failing to report harms or doing so inadequately. While the PRISMA statement (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses) helps systematic review authors ensure complete and transparent reporting, it is focused mainly on efficacy. Thus, a PRISMA harms checklist has been developed to improve harms reporting in systematic reviews, promoting a more balanced assessment of benefits and harms. METHODS: A development strategy, endorsed by the EQUATOR Network and existing reporting guidelines (including the PRISMA statement, PRISMA for abstracts, and PRISMA for protocols), was used. After the development of a draft checklist of items, a modified Delphi process was initiated. The Delphi consisted of three rounds of electronic feedback followed by an in-person meeting. RESULTS: The PRISMA harms checklist contains four essential reporting elements to be added to the original PRISMA statement to improve harms reporting in reviews. These are reported in the title ("Specifically mention 'harms' or other related terms, or the harm of interest in the review"), synthesis of results ("Specify how zero events were handled, if relevant"), study characteristics ("Define each harm addressed, how it was ascertained (eg, patient report, active search), and over what time period"), and synthesis of results ("Describe any assessment of possible causality"). Additional guidance regarding existing PRISMA items was developed to demonstrate relevance when synthesising information about harms. CONCLUSION: The PRISMA harms checklist identifies a minimal set of items to be reported when reviewing adverse events. This guideline extension is intended to improve harms reporting in systematic reviews, whether harms are a primary or secondary outcome.
AB - INTRODUCTION: For any health intervention, accurate knowledge of both benefits and harms is needed. Systematic reviews often compound poor reporting of harms in primary studies by failing to report harms or doing so inadequately. While the PRISMA statement (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses) helps systematic review authors ensure complete and transparent reporting, it is focused mainly on efficacy. Thus, a PRISMA harms checklist has been developed to improve harms reporting in systematic reviews, promoting a more balanced assessment of benefits and harms. METHODS: A development strategy, endorsed by the EQUATOR Network and existing reporting guidelines (including the PRISMA statement, PRISMA for abstracts, and PRISMA for protocols), was used. After the development of a draft checklist of items, a modified Delphi process was initiated. The Delphi consisted of three rounds of electronic feedback followed by an in-person meeting. RESULTS: The PRISMA harms checklist contains four essential reporting elements to be added to the original PRISMA statement to improve harms reporting in reviews. These are reported in the title ("Specifically mention 'harms' or other related terms, or the harm of interest in the review"), synthesis of results ("Specify how zero events were handled, if relevant"), study characteristics ("Define each harm addressed, how it was ascertained (eg, patient report, active search), and over what time period"), and synthesis of results ("Describe any assessment of possible causality"). Additional guidance regarding existing PRISMA items was developed to demonstrate relevance when synthesising information about harms. CONCLUSION: The PRISMA harms checklist identifies a minimal set of items to be reported when reviewing adverse events. This guideline extension is intended to improve harms reporting in systematic reviews, whether harms are a primary or secondary outcome.
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U2 - 10.1136/bmj.i157
DO - 10.1136/bmj.i157
M3 - Review article
C2 - 26830668
AN - SCOPUS:84959259456
SN - 0959-8146
VL - 352
JO - The BMJ
JF - The BMJ
M1 - i157
ER -