Stewart joined the Medical Research Council Cancer Trials Office in Cambridge in 1988 to carry out an "overview" synthesizing individual participant data from randomized trials of chemotherapy in advanced ovarian cancer. She was therefore fortunate enough to be part of the early development of systematic review methods. In particular, with colleagues including Mike Clarke and later Jayne Tierney, she helped establish the methods and practical approaches of systematic reviews and meta-analyses of individual participant data. Stewart and Clarke were amongst the founding members of the Cochrane Collaboration and in 1993 Stewart, Clarke and Tierney established the Cochrane IPD meta-analysis methods group. Stewart worked for the MRC for 17 years establishing a research programme in the Cancer Trials Office in Cambridge and subsequently in the MRC Clinical Trials Unit under the Directorship of Professor Janet Darbyshire. During this time with her research team she published many systematic reviews and IPD meta-analyses. In 2006 she was appointed as professor and Director of the Centre for Reviews and Dissemination at the University of York, where alongside her role as Director she has maintained her research interests in systematic review methods and IPD. Stewart has long standing interest in transparency and data sharing. For example, she has contributed to reporting standards for protocols and IPD meta-analysis. Whilst at the MRC she was responsible for launching the first completely open web based register of clinical trials, the UKCCCR of cancer trials. At CRD she instigated the development of PROSPERO the open access international prospective register of systematic reviews. She was able to bring these research strands together and be part of the YODA initiative’s first project to provide independent re-analysis and synthesis of industry data. Stewart is Co-editor in chief of the BioMed Central journal Systematic Reviews. She currently serves on the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence Highly Specialised Technologies Committee. Stewart was one of the first cohort of National Institute for Health Research Senior Investigators. In 2013, she was elected to serve as president of the Society for Research Synthesis Methodology.
Personal
Stewart lives in York with her husband Simon Thornton and their two daughters.