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Critical appraisal of (Systematic review) Meta-analysis

Critical appraisal of (Systematic review) Meta-analysis. 羅政勤 彰化秀傳紀念醫院. Objectives. To understand the different terminology of Meta-analysis, systematic review, To understand the key criteria for critical appraisal

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Critical appraisal of (Systematic review) Meta-analysis

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  1. Critical appraisal of (Systematic review)Meta-analysis 羅政勤 彰化秀傳紀念醫院

  2. Objectives • To understand the different terminology of Meta-analysis, systematic review, • To understand the key criteria for critical appraisal • To select an appropriate checklist or other instrument to use for critical appraisal. Validity, Impact, Practicability (CASP)

  3. Terminology • Review: ≧2 publication synthesise results + conclusions • Overview(systematic literature review): a review strives to comprehensively identify and track down all literature on a given topic • Meta-analysis: Specific statistical strategy assembling results of several studies into a single estimate

  4. Introduction • Systematic reviews form a potential method for overcoming the barriers faced by clinicians when trying to access and interpret evidence to inform their practice

  5. Systematic reviews • Concise summaries of best available evidence that addresses defined questions • scientific tool used to appraise, summarise, and communicate results and implications of otherwise unmanageable quantities of research

  6. Systematic reviews • Defining a question • A good question will have four components: • Type of person involved • Type of exposure • Type of control • Outcomes

  7. SR and Meta-analysis • Systematic reviews may or may not include a statistical synthesis called meta-analysis, • whether the studies are similar enough so that combining their results is meaningful

  8. Meta-analysis • Statistical method for combining the results of trials • Most appropriate for randomized trials • May also be appropriate for observational studies

  9. Results of a meta-analysis Forest plots of a meta-analysis of four randomized trials comparing no adjuvant chemotherapy with adjuvant chemotherapy in early-stage ovarian cancer for overall survival (A) and recurrence free survival (B). JNCI Cancer Spectrum 95(2):105-112

  10. Advantages of meta-analysis • Allows pooling of several studies = increase sample size • Gathers literature in one place • Provides a quantitative summary (possibly less bias than a narrative) • Generate hypotheses • Provide information for future trials

  11. Disadvantages of meta-analysis • Even randomized studies often differ significantly in their design, outcome, exposure measures • Publication bias • Studies differ in quality • Time trends • Health studies tend to be (comparatively) few

  12. Interpreting the results of a meta-analysis • Was process valid (question, search strategy, reproducible)? • Are studies comparable? • Are results similar? • What is the estimate and precision of the estimate?

  13. Conclusion • Systematic reviews : top of hierarchy of evidence • Caution before accepting findings of any systematic review without first appraising it

  14. Cautious • Attention paid to patient selection group , inter-vention, or search strategy; SR combined studies in meta-analysis pooled in different intervention or participants included

  15. 3 reasons validity finding 1) Chance 2) Bias 3) Confounding

  16. Chance • Random variation • Chance: statistical analysis (hypothesis testing and estimation.) • Avoid random variation : adequate  sample size

  17. Bias • Systematic (non-random) error in estimation of population characteristic e.g. effect of treatment compared to control in a population • Systematic means …

  18. Classification of sources of bias in analytical studies • Allocation • Performance • Placebo-effect • Attrition • Detection • Analytical • Reporting • Selection • Measurement • Analysis

  19. 1. Allocation bias • Any treatment allocation method that causes a systematic difference in participant characteristics at the start of a trial (baseline) • independent prognostic characteristics (confounders) • failure to plan e.g. confounding by indication • failure to execute

  20. 2. Performance bias • Systematic differences in the care of the two groups, other than the intervention being investigated • nursing & supportive care • monitoring for adverse effects

  21. 3. Placebo-effect bias • Placebo-effect - a beneficial effect gained because the participant believes he is receiving effective therapy (includes satisfying pat-doc relationship as well as medicinal intervention) • In trials with a “no-treatment” arm, confounding due to a differential placebo-effect may occur if the subjects are aware they are not receiving active therapy

  22. Reasons for bias - Confounding • When a non-causal association due to a common cause of both T and H prevents us from quantifying any causal association

  23. Confounding – measured & unmeasured common causes • Random variation (chance) imprecise • Systematic variation (bias) inaccurate • Confounder : factor prognostically linked to outcome and unevenly distributed btw study groups • Known confounders : stratify results- • Unknown confounders: randomisation

  24. Confounding – measured & unmeasured common causes Non-causal assoc drug cancer Smoking Supportive care Placebo-effect

  25. 4. Attrition bias • All clinical trials have a period of follow-up, attrition occurs when subjects do not complete the follow-up process (loss to follow-up) • This is harmful because attrition causes loss of information and hence less precise estimates of the treatment effect, if too many subjects cannot be analyzed • Systematic differences in the loss of participants to follow up between groups may cause bias if the analysis is improper e.g. analyzing only participants who had complete follow-up or who were fully compliant (per protocol analysis)

  26. 5. Detection bias • Systematic differences in outcome assessmentbtw groups • measurement method • follow-up frequency for outcomes

  27. 6. Analytical bias • Bias arising because of the method of analysis • choice of subjects to analyze • the analysis dataset • choice of statistical estimators • biased & unbiased estimators • choice of multivariate models

  28. 7. Reporting bias • Selective reporting of • clinical outcomes e.g. surrogate, subgroups • time-points e.g. early • Use of composite endpoints • component events not equally significant

  29. What is Apprasial? • A technique to increase effectiveness of reading by exclude research studies too poorly designed to inform practice.

  30. Why appraisal? • To free time of concentrate on a more systematic evaluation of studies cross quality threshold and extract salient points

  31. How to Appraise? • Appraising a Secondary studies(Review) • Validity • Impact(Results) • Practicability(Application) • Instruments tools such as CASP

  32. Critical Appraisal Skills Programme (CASP) • http://www.phru.nhs.uk/pages/PHD/CASP.htm

  33. Appraisal tools for Systematic review 10 questions to help you make sense of reviews • Is the study valid? • What are the results? • Will the results help locally? • 10 questions adapted from Oxman AD, Cook DJ, Guyatt GH, Users’ guides to medical literature. VI. How to use an overview. JAMA 1994; 272 (17): 1367-1371

  34. Screening question • First 2 questions • Screening questions can be answered quickly. • Worth proceeding If answer to both is “yes”,

  35. Screening question • 1. Did the review ask a clearly-focused question? 􀂉 Yes 􀂉 Can’t tell 􀂉 No Focused : – the population studied – the intervention given or exposure – the outcomes considered • 2. Did the review include the right type of study? 􀂉 Yes 􀂉 Can’t tell 􀂉 No included studies: – address the review’s question – have an appropriate study design • Is it worth continuing?

  36. 3. Did the reviewers try to identify all relevant studies? 􀂉 Yes 􀂉 Can’t tell 􀂉 No Consider: – which bibliographic databases were used – if there was follow-up from reference lists – if there was personal contact with experts –searched for unpublished studies –searched for non-English-language studies • 4. Did the reviewers assess the quality of the 􀂉 Yes 􀂉 Can’t tell 􀂉 No i– if a clear, pre-determined strategy was used to determine which studies were included. Look for: – a scoring system – more than one assessor

  37. 5. If the results of the studies have been combined, was it reasonable to do so? Consider – the results of each study are clearly displayed – the results were similar from study to study (look for tests of heterogeneity) – the reasons for any variations in results are discussed • 6. How are the results presented and what is the main result? Consider: – how the results are expressed (e.g. odds ratio,relative risk, etc.) – how large this size of result is and how • meaningful it is – how you would sum up the bottom-line result of • the review in one sentence

  38. 7. How precise are these results? • Consider: • – if a confidence interval were reported. Would • your decision about whether or not to use this • intervention be the same at the upper • confidence limit as at the lower confidence • limit? • – if a p-value is reported where confidence • intervals are unavailable

  39. 8. Can the results be applied to the local 􀂉 Yes 􀂉 Can’t tell 􀂉 No • population? • Consider whether: • – the population sample covered by the review • could be different from your population in ways • that would produce different results • – your local setting differs much from that of the • review • – you can provide the same intervention in your • setting • 9. Were all important outcomes considered? 􀂉 Yes 􀂉 Can’t tell 􀂉 No • Consider outcomes from the point of view of the: • – individual • – policy makers and professionals • – family/carers • – wider community • reported can it be filled in from elsewhere?

  40. 10. Should policy or practice change as a result of 􀂉 Yes 􀂉 Can’t tell 􀂉 No • the evidence contained in this review? • Consider: • – whether any benefit reported outweighs any • harm and/or cost. If this information is not

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