Systematic Literature Reviews
A systematic literature review is a rigorous and structured approach to identifying, selecting, evaluating, and synthesizing relevant studies on a specific research question. This type of review follows a predefined protocol, uses explicit selection criteria, and seeks to minimize the risk of bias, ensuring transparency and reproducibility.
Manuals and guidelines
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Cochrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews of Interventions Manual developed to assist in the production of systematic reviews using the Cochrane methodology. |
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JBI Manual for Evidence Synthesis Manual developed to assist in the production of systematic reviews using the Joanna Briggs Institute methodology. |
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Set of guidelines for developing evidence syntheses (PRISMA Checklist, PRISMA Flow Diagram, PRISMA Scoping Reviews, PRISMA Protocols, PRISMA Search). |
Protocol registration
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Free platform that allows collaborative management of research projects throughout their lifecycle. A persistent DOI (Digital Object Identifier) is assigned to deposits, facilitating citation. |
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Allows the registration of systematic reviews, rapid reviews, and umbrella reviews. |
Thesauruses
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Health Sciences Descriptors (DeCS) corresponds to the translation of the MeSH vocabulary by the Virtual Health Library (BVS), however, it is always recommended to check the descriptors in the MeSH browser. |
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Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) is the controlled vocabulary of the National Library of Medicine used in indexing scientific output in the PubMed/Medline database. |
Results screening
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Free online platform developed to assist researchers in producing systematic reviews and scoping reviews, accelerating the study selection process. |
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Diagram representing the study selection phase in evidence synthesis studies. The diagram can be downloaded in Word format. |
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PRISMA Flow Diagram (R package & Shiny app) Tool for creating the PRISMA Flow Diagram. |
Quality assessment
PROSPERO is an international registry of systematic review protocols, managed and maintained by the Centre for Reviews and Dissemination at the University of York and the National Institute for Health and Care Research in the United Kingdom. It allows for the free registration of systematic intervention reviews, assigning a unique identifier to each protocol.
This initiative promotes Open Science and transparency in research, reducing the risk of bias and avoiding duplication of topics. The table below describes the information required to complete the registry.
The registration form should be completed in accordance with the PRISMA-Protocols guidelines.
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Section |
Field |
Description |
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Review title and basic details |
Review title |
Title in English. |
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Condition or domain being studied |
Description of the PICO framework of the review. |
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Review objectives |
Review question and respective selection criteria, as well as the context and rationale for conducting the review. |
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Keywords |
Keywords (minimum of 3 free terms). |
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Eligibility criteria |
Population |
Participant characteristics and selection criteria. |
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Intervention(s) or exposure(s) |
Characteristics of the intervention and respective selection criteria. |
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Comparator(s) or control(s) |
Explain whether a comparator exists and, if so, define its characteristics and selection criteria. |
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Study design |
Types of studies to include. |
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Context |
Characteristics of the context or other selection criteria not previously stated. |
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Timeline of the review |
Review timeline |
Start date and expected completion date. |
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Availability of full protocol |
Availability of full protocol (optional field) |
Possibility of uploading a more extensive version of the protocol into the registry. |
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Searching and screening |
Search for unpublished studies |
State whether the search will include only published studies or also unpublished studies (gray literature). |
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Main bibliographic databases that will be searched |
Select the databases. |
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Search language restrictions |
Specify whether the revision will include language restrictions. |
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Search date restrictions |
Specify whether the search will include time restrictions. |
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Other methods of identifying studies |
State whether additional research will be conducted and, if so, what kind (select from list). |
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Link to search strategy |
Upload the research strategy to at least one database in PDF format. |
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Selection process |
Select the option regarding how the study selection process will be conducted. |
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Other relevant information about searching and screening (optional field) |
Describe other information related to the selection process (e.g., selection stages, conflict resolution). |
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Data collection process |
Data extraction from published articles and reports |
Select the option regarding how the data extraction process will be conducted. |
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Study risk of bias or quality assessment |
Define whether the process for assessing bias/quality risk in studies will be applied. |
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Reporting bias assessment |
Define whether the bias risk assessment process will be applied to sources with missing information. |
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Certainty assessment |
Define whether the process for assessing confidence in the results of the included sources will be applied (e.g., GRADE). |
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Outcomes to be analyzed |
Main outcomes |
Describe the main outcomes (definition of outcome, methods of measurement). |
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Additional outcomes (optional field) |
Describe secondary outcomes, if any. |
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Planned data synthesis |
Strategy for data synthesis |
Select the strategy/method to be applied in the synthesis of results. |
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Current review stage |
Stage of the review at this submission |
Select the status of the review at each stage of the process. |
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Publication of review results |
Select whether there is an intention to publish the review. |
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Review affiliation, funding and peer review |
Review team members |
Authors information. |
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Review affiliation |
Institutional affiliation of authors. |
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Funding source |
Select the applicable funding option. |
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Peer review |
Select whether the review was peer-reviewed. |
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Additional information |
Additional information (optional field) |
Describe any additional information that may be relevant to a better understanding of the rationale for the revision. |
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Review conflict of interest |
Select whether conflicts of interest exist. |
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Medical Subject Headings |
List MeSH terms related to the review. |
Open Science Framework (OSF) is a free platform that allows the registration and sharing of systematic review protocols, including scoping reviews, and assigns a permanent DOI to each record.
This initiative adheres to best practices in systematic review development and promotes the principles of Open Science, ensuring transparency, reducing the risk of bias, and preventing duplication of research topics.
The recommended form for registering systematic reviews is the Generalized Systematic Review Registration Form. The table below displays the required information for completing the registration, including only the most frequently used fields. All fields not included should be evaluated to determine whether they are relevant; if not, they can be marked as Not Applicable (NA). The registration form should be completed in accordance with the PRISMA-Protocols guidelines.
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Section |
Fields |
Information to be completed |
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Metadata |
Title |
Title of the protocol with identification of the review type. Even if the body of the protocol is in Portuguese, the title must be in English to ensure the record's retrievability. |
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Description |
Protocol abstract. |
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Contributors |
Author information. |
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Category |
Select the option Uncategorized. |
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License |
Registry access license |
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Subjects |
Select the area(s) of knowledge for the review. |
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| Tags | Free keywords | |
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Review methods |
Type of review |
Identify the type of review to be conducted and the methodology to be applied (JBI/Cochrane and PRISMA). |
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Review stages |
Identify the different stages of the review (e.g., defining the review question, searching, selecting, extracting, and synthesizing). |
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Current review stage |
Identify the stage of the review at the time of registration. |
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Start date |
Start date of the review. |
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End date |
Expected date for completion of the review. |
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Background |
Introduction to the protocol - should include a brief theoretical overview of the topic, the rationale for conducting the review, and its objectives. |
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Primary research question(s) |
Provide the main review question. |
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Secondary research question(s) |
Provide any supplementary questions, if applicable. |
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Software |
Specify the tools to be used in the different stages of the review (e.g., Rayyan for the selection process). |
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Funding |
Disclose funding, if applicable. |
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Conflicts of interest |
Declare conflicts of interest, if applicable. |
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Overlapping authorships |
If applicable, state whether the articles included may have been authored by the same authors as the review. |
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Search strategy |
Databases |
List the databases used. |
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Interfaces |
Identify the search interfaces of the databases used (e.g., Medline via PubMed, CINAHL Complete via EBSCO Host). |
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Grey literature |
Identify the gray literature repositories to be included. |
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria |
Describe PCC/PICO/PICo framework used and the respective selection criteria. |
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Query strings |
Provide the search query for at least one database, identifying the database and the date of the search. |
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Search validation procedure |
Describe the research validation process (e.g., preliminary research to identify key articles and relevant keywords, confirmation of retrieval of articles previously identified as relevant). |
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Other search strategies |
Describe other forms of research that complement database searches (e.g., manual searches on websites, analysis of bibliographic references in included articles, contact with authors). |
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Screening |
Screening stages |
Describe the stages of the selection process and the software used. |
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Used exclusion criteria |
Define the exclusion criteria applied in the selection process (e.g., language, dates, source types). |
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Screening reliability |
State the number of reviewers participating in the selection process and describe the strategies used to ensure that the process is conducted independently. The existence of a pilot testing phase may also be mentioned, if applicable. |
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Screening reconciliation procedure |
Describe the strategies to be used in conflict resolution (e.g., discussion among reviewers or through the intervention of a third reviewer). |
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Data management and sharing |
State whether the selection process will be shared in any way during the review (e.g., ask Rayyan for a permanent, non-editable link). |
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Extraction |
Entities to extract |
Describe the data to be extracted from the included articles (e.g., bibliographic information, population, concept, objectives, main results) and identify the extraction tool (e.g., JBI). |
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Extraction reliability |
State the number of reviewers involved in the extraction process and describe the strategies used to ensure that the process is carried out independently. |
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Extraction reconciliation procedure |
Describe the strategies to be used in conflict resolution (e.g., discussion among reviewers or through the intervention of a third reviewer). |
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Data management and sharing |
Describe how the extraction tools are shared (e.g., making a file available on the OSF). |
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Synthesis and quality assessment |
Planned data transformations (optional field for scoping reviews) |
Describe how the data will be processed (e.g., recoding, categorization, data aggregation). |
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Quality assessment (optional field for scoping reviews) |
Describe the tools to be applied in the process of assessing the quality/risk of bias of the sources included (e.g., JBI Critical Appraisal Tools, CASP Checklists, Cochrane Risk of Bias ROB). |
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Synthesis plan |
Describe the strategies to be applied in synthesizing the results (e.g., meta-analysis, meta-synthesis, narrative synthesis). |
Articles
Aromataris, E., & Riitano, D. (2014). Systematic Reviews: Constructing a Search Strategy and Searching for Evidence. AJN, American Journal of Nursing, 114(5), 49–56. https://doi.org/10.1097/01.NAJ.0000446779.99522.f6
Grant, M. J., & Booth, A. (2009). A typology of reviews: an analysis of 14 review types and associated methodologies. Health Information & Libraries Journal, 26(2), 91–108. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1471-1842.2009.00848.x
Kolaski, K., Logan, L. R., & Ioannidis, J. P. A. (2023). Guidance to best tools and practices for systematic reviews. Systematic Reviews, 12(1), 96. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13643-023-02255-9
Munn, Z., Peters, M. D. J., Stern, C., Tufanaru, C., McArthur, A., & Aromataris, E. (2018). Systematic review or scoping review? Guidance for authors when choosing between a systematic or scoping review approach. BMC Medical Research Methodology, 18(1), 143. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12874-018-0611-x
Peters, M. D. J., Godfrey, C., McInerney, P., Khalil, H., Larsen, P., Marnie, C., Pollock, D., Tricco, A. C., & Munn, Z. (2022). Best practice guidance and reporting items for the development of scoping review protocols. JBI Evidence Synthesis, 20(4), 953–968. https://doi.org/10.11124/JBIES-21-00242
Peters, M. D. J., Marnie, C., Tricco, A. C., Pollock, D., Munn, Z., Alexander, L., McInerney, P., Godfrey, C. M., & Khalil, H. (2020). Updated methodological guidance for the conduct of scoping reviews. JBI Evidence Synthesis, 18(10), 2119–2126. https://doi.org/10.11124/JBIES-20-00167
Pollock, D., Peters, M. D. J., Khalil, H., McInerney, P., Alexander, L., Tricco, A. C., Evans, C., De Moraes, É. B., Godfrey, C. M., Pieper, D., Saran, A., Stern, C., & Munn, Z. (2023). Recommendations for the extraction, analysis, and presentation of results in scoping reviews. JBI Evidence Synthesis, 21(3), 520–532. https://doi.org/10.11124/JBIES-22-00123
Books
Bettany-Saltikov, J., & McSherry, R. (2024). How to do a systematic literature review in nursing: a step-by-step guide (3rd ed.). McGraw Hill Open University Press.
Purssell, E., & McCrae, N. (2024). How to perform a systematic literature review: a guide for health and social care researchers, practitioners and students (2nd ed.). Springer Nature Switzerland.