People often confuse systematic and literature (narrative) reviews. They both are used to provide a summary of the existing literature or research on a specific topic.
A narrative or traditional literature review is a comprehensive, critical, and objective analysis of the current knowledge on a topic. They are an essential part of the research process and help to establish a theoretical framework and focus or context for your research. A literature review will help you to identify patterns and trends in the literature so that you can identify gaps or inconsistencies in a body of knowledge. This should lead you to a sufficiently focused research question that justifies your research.
A systematic review is comprehensive and has minimal bias. It is based on a specific question and uses eligibility criteria and a pre-planned protocol. This type of study evaluates the quality of evidence.
A systematic review can be either quantitative or qualitative:
Narrative reviews in comparison provide a perspective on topic (like a textbook chapter), may have no specified search strategy, might have significant bias issues, and may not evaluate quality of evidence.
This table provides a detailed comparison of systematic and literature (narrative) reviews.
Comparison table: Literature (Narrative) Review vs. Systematic Review |
Literature (Narrative) Review | Systematic Review | |
Pre-registration (before ther review starts | N/A |
Can register on PROSPERO or another online repository Optional to publish a full protocol paper |
Searching | often is not systematic or exhaustive | systematic searches of multiple databases and grey literature/supplementary searching |
Research question |
Can be a general topic or specific question |
"What is the effectivenes of...? (focuses on answering a specific research question) Clearly defined and answerable clinical question Recommend using PICO as a guide |
Guidelines |
N/A |
Reporting checklist: PRISMA, Guidance for conducting a review, IOM, Cochrane, etc. |
Authors |
One or more |
Three or more |
Timeline |
Weeks to months |
Months to years Average eighteen months |
Critical appraisal |
N/A |
Required |
Synthesis |
narrative |
narrative/tabular, sometimes accompanied by a meta-analysis |
There are other comprehensive literature reviews of similar methodology to the systematic review. These tools can help you determine which type of review you may want to conduct.
The type of review you conduct will depend on the purpose of the review, your question, your resources, expertise, and type of data.
Here are two suggested articles to consult if you want to know more about review types:
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. This article defines 14 types of reviews. There is a helpful summary table on pp.94-95
Sutton A, Clowes M, Preston L, Booth A. Meeting the review family: exploring review types and associated information retrieval requirements. Health information & libraries journal. 2019;36(3):202–222. doi:10.1111/hir.12276
This Comparison table is derived from a guide which is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International license, and was originally included in a workbook by Amanda Wanner at Plymouth University for Systematic Reviews and Scoping Reviews. Stephanie Roth at Temple University remixed the original version. Many thanks and much appreciation to Amanda Wanner and Stephanie Roth for allowing me to create a derivative of their work.
Funaro, M., Nyhan, K., & Brackett, A. (n.d.). What type of review could you write? Yale Harvey Cushing/John Hay Whitney Medical Library.