Assessment of the risk of bias in rehabilitation reviews

Int J Rehabil Res. 2012 Dec;35(4):317-22. doi: 10.1097/MRR.0b013e3283559b6b.

Abstract

Systematic reviews are used to inform practice, and develop guidelines and protocols. A questionnaire to quantify the risk of bias in systematic reviews, the review paper assessment (RPA) tool, was developed and tested. A search of electronic databases provided a data set of review articles that were then independently reviewed by two assessors using the RPA. The inter-rater reliability was between moderate and good (κ scores 0.46-0.95). Many reviews did not describe the purpose in terms of population, intervention, comparator and outcome measure (i.e. PICO format), making inter-rater agreement on this question difficult. The RPA discriminated between high-quality reviews and those with a risk of bias (e.g. inadequate reporting of search terms, lack of independent reviewing or inclusion of non-randomized-controlled trials). The RPA questionnaire was revised to ensure that questions (on the basis of clarity of purpose, extent of search, independence of reviewers, randomized-controlled trial inclusion and availability of data) had dichotomous answers so that the positive responses scored one. The risk of bias increases as the score reduces.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Publication Bias / statistics & numerical data*
  • Rehabilitation*
  • Research Design
  • Review Literature as Topic*
  • Selection Bias