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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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Michael Borenstein – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
In any meta-analysis, it is critically important to report the dispersion in effects as well as the mean effect. If an intervention has a moderate clinical impact "on average" we also need to know if the impact is moderate for all relevant populations, or if it varies from trivial in some to major in others. Or indeed, if the…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Error Patterns, Statistical Analysis, Intervention
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Cairns, Maxwell; Prendergast, Luke A. – Research Synthesis Methods, 2022
As a measure of heterogeneity in meta-analysis, the coefficient of variation (CV) has been recently considered, providing researchers with a complement to the very popular I[superscript 2] measure. While I[superscript 2] measures the proportion of total variance that is due to variance of the random effects, the CV is the ratio of the standard…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Statistical Analysis, Intervals, Computation
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Röver, Christian; Friede, Tim – Research Synthesis Methods, 2022
The variance-stabilizing Freeman-Tukey double arcsine transform was originally proposed for inference on single proportions. Subsequently, its use has been suggested in the context of meta-analysis of proportions. While some erratic behavior has been observed previously, here we point out and illustrate general issues of monotonicity and…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Research Problems, Statistical Analysis
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Céline Chapelle; Gwénaël Le Teuff; Paul Jacques Zufferey; Silvy Laporte; Edouard Ollier – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
The number of meta-analyses of aggregate data has dramatically increased due to the facility of obtaining data from publications and the development of free, easy-to-use, and specialised statistical software. Even when meta-analyses include the same studies, their results may vary owing to different methodological choices. Assessment of the…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Replication (Evaluation), Data Analysis, Statistical 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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Ivimey-Cook, Edward R.; Noble, Daniel W. A.; Nakagawa, Shinichi; Lajeunesse, Marc J.; Pick, Joel L. – Research Synthesis Methods, 2023
Extracting data from studies is the norm in meta-analyses, enabling researchers to generate effect sizes when raw data are otherwise not available. While there has been a general push for increased reproducibility in meta-analysis, the transparency and reproducibility of the data extraction phase is still lagging behind. Unfortunately, there is…
Descriptors: Replication (Evaluation), Data Collection, Meta Analysis, Computer Software
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Kulinskaya, Elena; Mah, Eung Yaw – Research Synthesis Methods, 2022
To present time-varying evidence, cumulative meta-analysis (CMA) updates results of previous meta-analyses to incorporate new study results. We investigate the properties of CMA, suggest possible improvements and provide the first in-depth simulation study of the use of CMA and CUSUM methods for detection of temporal trends in random-effects…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Computation, Statistical Analysis, Statistical Bias
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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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Mizutani, Shosuke; Zhou, Yi; Tian, Yu-Shi; Takagi, Tatsuya; Ohkubo, Tadayasu; Hattori, Satoshi – Research Synthesis Methods, 2023
Meta-analysis of diagnostic test accuracy (DTA) is a powerful statistical method for synthesizing and evaluating the diagnostic capacity of medical tests and has been extensively used by clinical physicians and healthcare decision-makers. However, publication bias (PB) threatens the validity of meta-analysis of DTA. Some statistical methods have…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Diagnostic Tests, Accuracy, Publications
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Stanley, T. D.; Doucouliagos, Hristos; Ioannidis, John P. A. – Research Synthesis Methods, 2022
Recent, high-profile, large-scale, preregistered failures to replicate uncover that many highly-regarded experiments are "false positives"; that is, statistically significant results of underlying null effects. Large surveys of research reveal that statistical power is often low and inadequate. When the research record includes selective…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Replication (Evaluation), Statistical Analysis, Research Problems
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Xu, Chang; Furuya-Kanamori, Luis; Lin, Lifeng – Research Synthesis Methods, 2022
In evidence synthesis, dealing with zero-events studies is an important and complicated task that has generated broad discussion. Numerous methods provide valid solutions to synthesizing data from studies with zero-events, either based on a frequentist or a Bayesian framework. Among frequentist frameworks, the one-stage methods have their unique…
Descriptors: Evidence, Synthesis, Statistical Analysis, Meta Analysis
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Henmi, Masayuki; Hattori, Satoshi; Friede, Tim – Research Synthesis Methods, 2021
In meta-analyses including only few studies, the estimation of the between-study heterogeneity is challenging. Furthermore, the assessment of publication bias is difficult as standard methods such as visual inspection or formal hypothesis tests in funnel plots do not provide adequate guidance. Previously, Henmi and Copas (Statistics in Medicine…
Descriptors: Statistical Analysis, Computation, Bias, Publications
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A. E. Ades; Nicky J. Welton; Sofia Dias; David M. Phillippo; Deborah M. Caldwell – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
Network meta-analysis (NMA) is an extension of pairwise meta-analysis (PMA) which combines evidence from trials on multiple treatments in connected networks. NMA delivers internally consistent estimates of relative treatment efficacy, needed for rational decision making. Over its first 20 years NMA's use has grown exponentially, with applications…
Descriptors: Network Analysis, Meta Analysis, Medicine, Clinical Experience
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Nyaga, Victoria N.; Arbyn, Marc – Research Synthesis Methods, 2023
We developed "metadta," a flexible, robust, and user-friendly statistical procedure that fuses established and innovative statistical methods for meta-analysis, meta-regression, and network meta-analysis of diagnostic test accuracy studies in Stata. Using data from published meta-analyses, we validate "metadta" by comparing and…
Descriptors: Metadata, Accuracy, Diagnostic Tests, Statistical Analysis
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