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T. D. Stanley; Hristos Doucouliagos; Tomas Havranek – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
We demonstrate that all meta-analyses of partial correlations are biased, and yet hundreds of meta-analyses of partial correlation coefficients (PCCs) are conducted each year widely across economics, business, education, psychology, and medical research. To address these biases, we offer a new weighted average, UWLS[subscript +3]. UWLS[subscript…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Correlation, Bias, Sample Size
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Furuya-Kanamori, Luis; Lin, Lifeng; Kostoulas, Polychronis; Clark, Justin; Xu, Chang – Research Synthesis Methods, 2023
Limiting the search date is a common approach utilised in therapeutic/interventional rapid reviews. Yet the accuracy of pooled estimates is unknown when applied to rapid reviews of diagnostic test accuracy studies. Data from all systematic reviews of diagnostic test accuracy studies published in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, until…
Descriptors: Diagnostic Tests, Accuracy, Meta Analysis, Item Banks
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Peter J. Godolphin; Nadine Marlin; Chantelle Cornett; David J. Fisher; Jayne F. Tierney; Ian R. White; Ewelina Rogozinska – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
Individual participant data (IPD) meta-analyses of randomised trials are considered a reliable way to assess participant-level treatment effect modifiers but may not make the best use of the available data. Traditionally, effect modifiers are explored one covariate at a time, which gives rise to the possibility that evidence of treatment-covariate…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Randomized Controlled Trials, Statistical Analysis, Participant Characteristics
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Brinley N. Zabriskie; Nolan Cole; Jacob Baldauf; Craig Decker – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
Meta-analyses have become the gold standard for synthesizing evidence from multiple clinical trials, and they are especially useful when outcomes are rare or adverse since individual trials often lack sufficient power to detect a treatment effect. However, when zero events are observed in one or both treatment arms in a trial, commonly used…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Error Correction, Computation, Simulation
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Guido Schwarzer; Gerta Rücker; Cristina Semaca – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
The "LFK" index has been promoted as an improved method to detect bias in meta-analysis. Putatively, its performance does not depend on the number of studies in the meta-analysis. We conducted a simulation study, comparing the "LFK" index test to three standard tests for funnel plot asymmetry in settings with smaller or larger…
Descriptors: Bias, Meta Analysis, Simulation, Evaluation Methods
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Suzanne C. Freeman; Alex J. Sutton; Nicola J. Cooper; Alessandro Gasparini; Michael J. Crowther; Neil Hawkins – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
Background: Traditionally, meta-analysis of time-to-event outcomes reports a single pooled hazard ratio assuming proportional hazards (PH). For health technology assessment evaluations, hazard ratios are frequently extrapolated across a lifetime horizon. However, when treatment effects vary over time, an assumption of PH is not always valid. The…
Descriptors: Cancer, Medical Research, Bayesian Statistics, Meta Analysis
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Sean McGrath; XiaoFei Zhao; Omer Ozturk; Stephan Katzenschlager; Russell Steele; Andrea Benedetti – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
When performing an aggregate data meta-analysis of a continuous outcome, researchers often come across primary studies that report the sample median of the outcome. However, standard meta-analytic methods typically cannot be directly applied in this setting. In recent years, there has been substantial development in statistical methods to…
Descriptors: Statistical Analysis, Meta Analysis, Data Analysis, Sampling
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Jinma Ren; Jia Ma; Joseph C. Cappelleri – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
A random-effects model is often applied in meta-analysis when considerable heterogeneity among studies is observed due to the differences in patient characteristics, timeframe, treatment regimens, and other study characteristics. Since 2014, the journals "Research Synthesis Methods" and the "Annals of Internal Medicine" have…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Effect Size, Oncology, Patients
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Kansak Boonpattharatthiti; Garin Ruenin; Pun Kulwong; Jitsupa Lueawattanasakul; Chintra Saechao; Panitan Pitak; Deborah M. Caldwell; Nathorn Chaiyakunapruk; Teerapon Dhippayom – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
Psychological interventions are complex in nature and have been shown to benefit various clinical outcomes. Gaining insight into current practices would help identify specific aspects that need improvement to enhance the quality of network meta-analysis (NMA) in this field. This scoping review aimed to explore methodological approaches in the NMA…
Descriptors: Literature Reviews, Meta Analysis, Mental Health, Intervention
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Yasushi Tsujimoto; Yusuke Tsutsumi; Yuki Kataoka; Akihiro Shiroshita; Orestis Efthimiou; Toshi A. Furukawa – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
Meta-analyses examining dichotomous outcomes often include single-zero studies, where no events occur in intervention or control groups. These pose challenges, and several methods have been proposed to address them. A fixed continuity correction method has been shown to bias estimates, but it is frequently used because sometimes software (e.g.,…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Literature Reviews, Epidemiology, Error Correction
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Maria Llambrich; Pau Satorra; Eudald Correig; Josep Gumà; Jesús Brezmes; Cristian Tebé; Raquel Cumeras – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
Meta-analysis is a useful tool in clinical research, as it combines the results of multiple clinical studies to improve precision when answering a particular scientific question. While there has been a substantial increase in publications using meta-analysis in various clinical research topics, the number of published meta-analyses in metabolomics…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Programming Languages, Information Technology, Computer Oriented Programs
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Wang, Rui; Dwan, Kerry; Showell, Marian G.; van Wely, Madelon; Mol, Ben W.; Askie, Lisa; Seidler, Anna Lene – Research Synthesis Methods, 2022
Publishing systematic review protocols is a fundamental part of systematic reviews to ensure transparency and reproducibility. In this scoping review, we aimed to evaluate reporting of Cochrane systematic review protocols with network meta-analyses (NMA). We searched all Cochrane NMA protocols published in 2018 and 2019, and assessed the…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Meta Analysis, Literature Reviews, Network Analysis
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Lunny, Carole; Reid, Emma K.; Neelakant, Trish; Chen, Alyssa; Zhang, Jia He; Shinger, Gavindeep; Stevens, Adrienne; Tasnim, Sara; Sadeghipouya, Shadi; Adams, Stephen; Zheng, Yi Wen; Lin, Lester; Yang, Pei Hsuan; Dosanjh, Manpreet; Ngsee, Peter; Ellis, Ursula; Shea, Beverley J.; Wright, James M. – Research Synthesis Methods, 2022
Multiple 'overviews of reviews' conducted on the same topic ("overlapping overviews") represent a waste of research resources and can confuse clinicians making decisions amongst competing treatments. We aimed to assess the frequency and characteristics of overlapping overviews. MEDLINE, Epistemonikos and Cochrane Database of Systematic…
Descriptors: Taxonomy, Literature Reviews, Meta Analysis, Incidence
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Jiang, Ziren; Cao, Wenhao; Chu, Haitao; Bazerbachi, Fateh; Siegel, Lianne – Research Synthesis Methods, 2023
A reference interval, or an interval in which a prespecified proportion of measurements from a healthy population are expected to fall, is used to determine whether a person's measurement is typical of a healthy individual. For a specific biomarker, multiple published studies may provide data collected from healthy participants. A reference…
Descriptors: Intervals, Computation, Meta Analysis, Measurement
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Jona Lilienthal; Sibylle Sturtz; Christoph Schürmann; Matthias Maiworm; Christian Röver; Tim Friede; Ralf Bender – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
In Bayesian random-effects meta-analysis, the use of weakly informative prior distributions is of particular benefit in cases where only a few studies are included, a situation often encountered in health technology assessment (HTA). Suggestions for empirical prior distributions are available in the literature but it is unknown whether these are…
Descriptors: Bayesian Statistics, Meta Analysis, Health Sciences, Technology
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