Large language models for automated PRISMA 2020 adherence checking
Yuki Kataoka, Ryuhei So, Masahiro Banno, Yasushi Tsujimoto, Tomohiro Takayama, Yosuke Yamagishi, Takahiro Tsuge, Norio Yamamoto, Chiaki Suda, Toshi A. Furukawa
TL;DR
A copyright-aware benchmark of 108 Creative Commons-licensed systematic reviews and ten large language models across five input formats substantially improves LLM-based PRISMA assessment, though human expert verification remains essential before editorial decisions.
Abstract
Evaluating adherence to PRISMA 2020 guideline remains a burden in the peer review process. To address the lack of shareable benchmarks, we constructed a copyright-aware benchmark of 108 Creative Commons-licensed systematic reviews and evaluated ten large language models (LLMs) across five input formats. In a development cohort, supplying structured PRISMA 2020 checklists (Markdown, JSON, XML, or plain text) yielded 78.7-79.7% accuracy versus 45.21% for manuscript-only input (p less than 0.0001), with no differences between structured formats (p>0.9). Across models, accuracy ranged from 70.6-82.8% with distinct sensitivity-specificity trade-offs, replicated in an independent validation cohort. We then selected Qwen3-Max (a high-sensitivity open-weight model) and extended evaluation to the full dataset (n=120), achieving 95.1% sensitivity and 49.3% specificity. Structured checklist provision substantially improves LLM-based PRISMA assessment, though human expert verification remains essential before editorial decisions.
