Information on harm outcomes was insufficiently reported in systematic reviews and meta-analyses of individual participant data
Author | Xu, Chang |
Author | Kwong, Joey S. W. |
Author | Jia, Pengli |
Author | Liu, Yu |
Author | Zhang, Weixin |
Author | Qin, Zongshi |
Author | Liu, Tongzu |
Available date | 2023-09-06T05:27:57Z |
Publication Date | 2021 |
Publication Name | Journal of Evidence-Based Medicine |
Resource | Scopus |
ISSN | 17565383 |
Abstract | Meta-analysis is an important tool for summarizing findings from scientific research. But for harm outcomes,issues may arise due to the distribution problems, zero-events problems, as well as low statistical power. Individual participant data (IPD) meta-analysis represents a viable approach to overcome these shortcomings because all eligible small-scale studies can be treated as one large trial with multiple clusters through a one-stage analytic. An increasing number of IPD meta-analyses of healthcare interventions are published over the past years.6 Findings from these IPD meta-analyses contribute to the evolving body of best available evidence for informed decision-making. However, quality of safety reporting by the emerging IPD meta-analyses remains to be ascertained. In this study, we appraised the reporting of IPD meta-analyses, with a special focus on safety outcomes. |
Sponsor | L.TZ is funded by a National Key Research and Development Plan of China (Grant No. 2016YFC0106300). |
Language | en |
Publisher | John Wiley and Sons Inc |
Subject | data quality decision making financial management human information Letter meta analysis systematic review Humans Systematic Reviews as Topic |
Type | Article |
Pagination | 265-268 |
Issue Number | 4 |
Volume Number | 14 |
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