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Lecture 10: Meta-analysis of intervention studies

Lecture 10: Meta-analysis of intervention studies. Introduction to meta-analysis Selection of studies Abstraction of information Quality scores Methods of analysis and presentation Sources of bias. Definitions. Traditional (narrative) review: Selective, biassed

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Lecture 10: Meta-analysis of intervention studies

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  1. Lecture 10:Meta-analysis of intervention studies • Introduction to meta-analysis • Selection of studies • Abstraction of information • Quality scores • Methods of analysis and presentation • Sources of bias

  2. Definitions • Traditional (narrative) review: • Selective, biassed • Systematic review (overview): • Synthesis of studies of a research question • Explicit methods for study selection, data abstraction, and analysis (repeatable) • Meta-analysis: • Quantitative pooling of study results

  3. Source: l’Abbé et al, Ann Intren Med 1987, 107: 224-233

  4. Protocol preparation • Research question • Study “population”: • search strategy • inclusion/exclusion criteria

  5. Protocol: Search strategy • computerized databases • E.g. Medline, CINAHL, Embase, Cochrane clinical trial database, PubMed, Psychinfo • test sensitivity and predictive value of search strategy • hand-searches (reference list, relevant journals, colleagues) • “grey” (unpublished) literature: • pro: publication bias • con: results less reliable • Search strategy should be reliable

  6. Identifying relevant studies for systematic reviews of RCTs in vision research(Dickerson, in Systematic Reviews, BMJ,1995) • Sensitivity and “precision” of Medline searches • Gold standard: • registry of RCTs in vision research • extensive computer and hand searches • contacts with investigators to clarify design • Sensitivity: • proportion of known RCTs identified by the search • “Precision” (PV+): • proportion of publications identified by search that were RCTs

  7. Source: Chalmers + Altman, Systematic Reviews, BMJ Publishing Group, 1995

  8. Source: Chalmers + Altman, Systematic Reviews, BMJ Publishing Group, 1995

  9. Source: Chalmers + Altman, Systematic Reviews, BMJ Publishing Group, 1995

  10. Protocol preparation • Study “population”: • inclusion/exclusion criteria: • language • study design • outcome of interest • etc. Source: Data abstraction form for meta-analysis project

  11. Protocol preparation • Data collection: • standardized abstraction form • number of abstractors • blinding of abstractors • rules for resolving discrepancies (consensus, other) • use of quality scores

  12. Source: l’Abbé et al, Ann Intren Med 1987, 107:224-233

  13. Analysis • Measure of effect: • odds ratio, risk/rate ratio • risk/rate difference • relative risk reduction • Graphical methods: • conventional (individual studies) • cumulative • exploring heterogeneity

  14. Analyses • Pooling results: • is it appropriate? • equivalent to pooling results from multi-centre trials • fixed effect (e.g., Mantel-Haenzel) methods • assume that all trials have same underlying treatment effect • random effect methods (e.g., DerSimonian & Laird): • allow for heterogeneity of treatment effects

  15. Source: Chalmers + Altman Systematic Reviews, BMJ Publishing Group, 1995

  16. Source: Chalmers + Altman Systematic Reviews, BMJ Publishing Group, 1995

  17. Heterogeneity • Sources of heterogeneity: • Study design • Study population • Intervention • Methodological features • Approaches: • Descriptive and graphical analyses • Meta-regression • Effect size is outcome

  18. Source: l’Abbé et al, Ann Intren Med 1987, 107:224-233

  19. Quality scores • Rating scales and checklists to assess methodological quality of RCTs • How should they be used? • Qualitative assessment • Exclusion of weaker studies • Weighting of estimates

  20. Does quality of trials affect estimate of intervention efficacy? (Moher et al, 1998) • Random sample of 11 meta-analyses of 127 RCTs • Replicated analysis • Used quality scales/measures • Results: • masked abstraction provided higher quality score than unmasked • low quality trials found stronger effects than high quality trials • quality-weighted analysis resulted in lower statistical heterogeneity

  21. Source: Moher et al, Lancet 1998, 352: 609-13

  22. Source: Moher et al, Lancet 1998, 352; 609-13

  23. Unresolved questions about meta-analysis • Apples and oranges? • Between-study differences in study population, design, outcome measures, etc. • Inclusion of weak studies? • Publication bias • methods to evaluate impact • - particularly with small studies • Is it better to do good original studies?

  24. Large trials vs meta-analyses of smaller trials (Cappelleri et al, 1996) • Selected meta-analyses from Medline and Cochrane pregnancy and childbirth database with at least 1 “large” study and 2 smaller studies: • sample size approach (n=1000+) - 79 meta-analyses • statistical power approach (adequate size to detect treatment effect from pooled analysis - 61 meta-analyses • Results: • agreement between larger trials and meta-analysis 82-90% using random effects models • greater disagreement using fixed effects models

  25. Large trials vs meta-analyses of smaller trials (Cappelleri et al, 1996) • Results: • agreement between larger trials and meta-analysis 82-90% using random effects models • greater disagreement using fixed effects models • Conclusion: • large and small trial results generally agree • each type of trial has advantages and disadvantages: • large trials provide more stable estimates of effect • small trials may better effect heterogeneity of clinical populations

  26. Risk ratios from large studies vs pooled smaller studies (Cappeleri et al,1996)(Left- sample size approach; right - statistical power approach) Source: Cappeleri et al, JAMA 1996, 276: 1332-1338

  27. Source: Cappeleri et al, JAMA 1996, 276: 1332-1338

  28. Discrepancies between meta-analyses and subsequent large RCTs (LeLorier et al, 1997) • Compared results of 12 large (n=1000+) RCTs with results of 19 prior meta-analyses on same topics

  29. Source: Lelorier et al, NEJM 1997, 337: 536-42

  30. Source: Lelorier et al, NEJM 1997, 337: 536-42

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