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Meta-analysis: summarising data for two arm trials and other simple outcome studies

Meta-analysis: summarising data for two arm trials and other simple outcome studies. Steff Lewis statistician. When can/should you do a meta-analysis?. When more than one study has estimated an effect

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Meta-analysis: summarising data for two arm trials and other simple outcome studies

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  1. Meta-analysis:summarising data for two arm trials and other simple outcome studies Steff Lewis statistician

  2. When can/should you do a meta-analysis? • When more than one study has estimated an effect • When there are no differences in the study characteristics that are likely to substantially affect outcome • When the outcome has been measured in similar ways • When the data are available (take care with interpretation when only some data are available)

  3. Types of data • Dichotomous/ binary data • Counts of infrequent events • Short ordinal scales • Long ordinal scales • Continuous data • Censored data

  4. What to collect • Need the total number of patients in each treatment group Plus: • Binary data • The number of patients who had the relevant outcome in each treatment group • Continuous data • The mean and standard deviation of the effect for each treatment group

  5. Then enter data into RevMan / MIX (easy to use and free) http://www.mix-for-meta-analysis.info/ http://www.cc-ims.net/RevMan/ Or R (harder to use and free) Or Stata (harder to use and costs) Etc etc....

  6. Summary statistic for each study • Calculate a single summary statistic to represent the effect found in each study • For binary data • Risk ratio with rarer event as outcome • For continuous data • Difference between means

  7. Meta-analysis

  8. Averaging studies • Starting with the summary statistic for each study, how should we combine these? • A simple average gives each study equal weight • This seems intuitively wrong • Some studies are more likely to give an answer closer to the ‘true’ effect than others

  9. Weighting studies • More weight to the studies which give us more information • More participants • More events • Lower variance • Weight is closely related to the width of the study confidence interval: wider confidence interval = less weight

  10. Displaying results graphically • RevMan (the Cochrane Collaboration’s free meta-analysis software) and MIX produce forest plots (as do R and Stata and some other packages)

  11. Heterogeneity

  12. What is heterogeneity? • Heterogeneity is variation between the studies’ results

  13. Causes of heterogeneity Differences between studies with respect to: • Patients: diagnosis, in- and exclusion criteria, etc. • Interventions: type, dose, duration, etc. • Outcomes: type, scale, cut-off points, duration of follow-up, etc. • Quality and methodology:randomised or not, allocation concealment, blinding, etc.

  14. How to deal with heterogeneity 1.Do not pool at all 2. Ignore heterogeneity: use fixed effect model 3. Allow for heterogeneity: use random effects model 4. Explore heterogeneity: meta-regression (tricky)

  15. How to assess heterogeneity from a forest plot

  16. Statistical measures of heterogeneity • The Chi2 test measures the amount of variation in a set of trials, and tells us if it is more than would be expected by chance

  17. Estimates with 95% confidence intervals Study Liggins 1972 Block 1977 Morrison 1978 Taeusch 1979 Papageorgiou 1979 Schutte 1979 Collaborative Group 1981 Pooled 0.61 ( 0.46 , 0.81 ) 0.05 0.25 1 4 Odds ratio Corticosteroids better Corticosteroids worse Trials from Cochrane logo: Corticosteroids for preterm birth (neonatal death) Heterogeneity test Q = 11.2 (6 d.f.) p = 0.08

  18. Estimates with 95% confidence intervals Study Liggins 1972 Block 1977 Morrison 1978 Taeusch 1979 Papageorgiou 1979 Schutte 1979 Collaborative Group 1981 0.05 0.25 1 4 0.05 0.25 1 4 Odds ratio Odds ratio Corticosteroids for preterm birth (neonatal death) Heterogeneity test Q = 11.2 (6 d.f.) p = 0.08 Heterogeneity test Q = 44.7 (27 d.f.) p = 0.02

  19. I squared quantifies heterogeneity where Q = heterogeneity c2 statistic I2 can be interpreted as the proportion of total variability explained by heterogeneity, rather than chance

  20. Roughly, I2 values of 25%, 50%,and 75% could be interpreted as indicating low, moderate, and high heterogeneity • For more info see: Higgins JPT et al. Measuring inconsistency in meta-analyses. BMJ 2003;327:557-60.

  21. Fixed and random effects

  22. Fixed effect Philosophy behind fixed effect model: • there is one real value for the treatment effect • all trials estimate this one value Problems with ignoring heterogeneity: • confidence intervals too narrow

  23. Random effects Philosophy behind random effects model: • there are many possible real values for the treatment effect (depending on dose, duration, etc etc). • each trial estimates its own real value

  24. Example

  25. Could we just add the data from all the trials together? • One approach to combining trials would be to add all the treatment groups together, add all the control groups together, and compare the totals • This is wrong for several reasons, and it can give the wrong answer

  26. If we add up the columns we get 34.3% vs 32.5% , a RR of 1.06, a higher chance of death in the steroids group From a meta-analysis, we get RR=0.96 , a lower chance of death in the steroids group

  27. Problems with simple addition of studies • breaks the power of randomisation • imbalances within trials introduce bias

  28. * The Pitts trial contributes 17% (201/1194) of all the data to the experimental column, but 8% (74/925) to the control column. Therefore it contributes more information to the average chance of death in the experimental column than it does to the control column. There is a high chance of death in this trial, so the chance of death for the expt column is higher than the control column.

  29. Interpretation

  30. Interpretation - “Evidence of absence” vs “Absence of evidence” • If the confidence interval crosses the line of no effect, this does not mean that there is no difference between the treatments • It means we have found no statistically significant difference in the effects of the two interventions

  31. In the example below, as more data is included, the overall odds ratio remains the same but the confidence interval decreases. It is not true that there is ‘no difference’ shown in the first rows of the plot – there just isn’t enough data to show a statistically significant result.

  32. Interpretation - Weighing up benefit and harm • When interpreting results, don’t just emphasise the positive results. • A treatment might cure acne instantly, but kill one person in 10,000 (very important as acne is not life threatening).

  33. Interpretation - Quality • Rubbish studies = unbelievable results • If all the trials in a meta-analysis were of very low quality, then you should be less certain of your conclusions. • Instead of “Treatment X cures depression”, try “There is some evidence that Treatment X cures depression, but the data should be interpreted with caution.”

  34. Summary • Choose an appropriate effect measure • Collect data from trials and do a meta-analysis if appropriate • Interpret the results carefully • Evidence of absence vs absence of evidence • Benefit and harm • Quality • Heterogeneity

  35. Sources of statistics help and advice Cochrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews of Interventions http://www.cochrane.org/resources/handbook/index.htm The Cochrane distance learning material http://www.cochrane-net.org/openlearning/ The Cochrane RevMan user guide. http://www.cc-ims.net/RevMan/documentation.htm

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