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Landan Zhang; Dan Jackson – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
A recent paper proposed an alternative weighting scheme when performing matching-adjusted indirect comparisons. This alternative approach follows the conventional one in matching the covariate means across two studies but differs in that it maximizes the effective sample size when doing so. The appendix of this paper showed, assuming there is one…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Medical Research, Sample Size, Research Methodology
Danielle Pollock; Timothy Hugh Barker; Jennifer C. Stone; Edoardo Aromataris; Miloslav Klugar; Anna M. Scott; Cindy Stern; Amanda Ross-White; Ashley Whitehorn; Rick Wiechula; Larissa Shamseer; Zachary Munn – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
Predatory journals are a blemish on scholarly publishing and academia and the studies published within them are more likely to contain data that is false. The inclusion of studies from predatory journals in evidence syntheses is potentially problematic due to this propensity for false data to be included. To date, there has been little exploration…
Descriptors: Periodicals, Deception, Ethics, Medical Research
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
Lauren Maxwell; Priya Shreedhar; Mabel Carabali; Brooke Levis – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
Individual participant data meta-analyses (IPD-MAs) have several benefits over standard aggregate data meta-analyses, including the consideration of additional participants, follow-up time, and the joint consideration of study- and participant-level heterogeneity for improved diagnostic and prognostic model development and evaluation. However,…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Authors, Guides, Budgets
Konstantinos I. Bougioukas; Paschalis Karakasis; Konstantinos Pamporis; Emmanouil Bouras; Anna-Bettina Haidich – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
Systematic reviews (SRs) have an important role in the healthcare decision-making practice. Assessing the overall confidence in the results of SRs using quality assessment tools, such as "A MeaSurement Tool to Assess Systematic Reviews 2" (AMSTAR 2), is crucial since not all SRs are conducted using the most rigorous methods. In this…
Descriptors: Programming Languages, Research Methodology, Decision Making, Medical Research
Page, Matthew J.; Sterne, Jonathan A. C.; Higgins, Julian P. T.; Egger, Matthias – Research Synthesis Methods, 2021
A "P" value, or the magnitude or direction of results can influence decisions about whether, when, and how research findings are disseminated. Regardless of whether an entire study or a particular study result is unavailable because investigators considered the results to be unfavorable, bias in a meta-analysis may occur when available…
Descriptors: Publications, Bias, Medical Research, Meta Analysis
Abrams, Ruth; Park, Sophie; Wong, Geoff; Rastogi, Juhi; Boylan, Anne-Marie; Tierney, Stephanie; Petrova, Mila; Dawson, Shoba; Roberts, Nia – Research Synthesis Methods, 2021
The involvement of non-researcher contributors (eg, stakeholders, patients and the public, decision and policy makers, experts, lay contributors) has taken a variety of forms within evidence syntheses. Realist reviews are a form of evidence synthesis that involves non-researcher contributors yet this practice has received little attention. In…
Descriptors: Medical Research, Evidence, Patients, Public Opinion
Vo, Tat-Thang; Porcher, Raphael; Chaimani, Anna; Vansteelandt, Stijn – Research Synthesis Methods, 2019
Case-mix heterogeneity across studies complicates meta-analyses. As a result of this, treatments that are equally effective on patient subgroups may appear to have different effectiveness on patient populations with different case mix. It is therefore important that meta-analyses be explicit for what patient population they describe the treatment…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Meta Analysis, Research Problems, Medical Research
Tipton, Elizabeth; Pustejovsky, James E.; Ahmadi, Hedyeh – Research Synthesis Methods, 2019
Having surveyed the history and methods of meta-regression in a previous paper, in this paper, we review which and how meta-regression methods are applied in recent research syntheses. To do so, we reviewed studies published in 2016 across four leading research synthesis journals: "Psychological Bulletin," the "Journal of Applied…
Descriptors: Medical Research, Psychological Studies, Regression (Statistics), Journal Articles
Luhnen, Miriam; Prediger, Barbara; Neugebauer, Edmund A. M.; Mathes, Tim – Research Synthesis Methods, 2019
Introduction: The number of systematic reviews of health economic evaluations (SR-HEs) is increasing. We aimed at providing a detailed overview of the characteristics and applied methods in recently published SR-HEs. Methods: We searched MEDLINE (03/2017) for SR-HEs published since 2015 using validated search filters. We included studies that…
Descriptors: Economics, Databases, Medical Research, Search Strategies
Moustgaard, Helene; Jones, Hayley E.; Savovic, Jelena; Clayton, Gemma L.; Sterne, Jonathan AC; Higgins, Julian PT; Hróbjartsson, Asbjørn – Research Synthesis Methods, 2020
Randomized clinical trials underpin evidence-based clinical practice, but flaws in their conduct may lead to biased estimates of intervention effects and hence invalid treatment recommendations. The main approach to the empirical study of bias is to collate a number of meta-analyses and, within each, compare the results of trials with and without…
Descriptors: Epidemiology, Evidence, Medical Research, Intervention
Sutton, Anthea; Galvan De La Cruz, Maria Carmen; Leaviss, Joanna; Booth, Andrew – Research Synthesis Methods, 2018
Introduction: Registration and publication of trial protocols has become increasingly important and a requirement in some sources of funding and publication. Increased access to protocols yields many potential benefits, but there are issues regarding identification of published protocols. The aim of this investigation is to compare methods of…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Medical Research, Research Methodology, Outcomes of Treatment
Hong, Hwanhee; Chu, Haitao; Zhang, Jing; Carlin, Bradley P. – Research Synthesis Methods, 2016
Bayesian statistical approaches to mixed treatment comparisons (MTCs) are becoming more popular because of their flexibility and interpretability. Many randomized clinical trials report multiple outcomes with possible inherent correlations. Moreover, MTC data are typically sparse (although richer than standard meta-analysis, comparing only two…
Descriptors: Bayesian Statistics, Meta Analysis, Outcomes of Treatment, Comparative Analysis
Kulinskaya, Elena; Wood, John – Research Synthesis Methods, 2014
Statistical methods for sequential meta-analysis have applications also for the design of new trials. Existing methods are based on group sequential methods developed for single trials and start with the calculation of a required information size. This works satisfactorily within the framework of fixed effects meta-analysis, but conceptual…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Statistical Analysis, Meta Analysis, Sample Size