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Riley, Richard D.; Ensor, Joie; Hattle, Miriam; Papadimitropoulou, Katerina; Morris, Tim P. – Research Synthesis Methods, 2023
Individual participant data meta-analysis (IPDMA) projects obtain, check, harmonise and synthesise raw data from multiple studies. When undertaking the meta-analysis, researchers must decide between a two-stage or a one-stage approach. In a two-stage approach, the IPD are first analysed separately within each study to obtain aggregate data (e.g.,…
Descriptors: Data Analysis, Meta Analysis, Models, Computation
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Rrita Zejnullahi; Larry V. Hedges – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
Conventional random-effects models in meta-analysis rely on large sample approximations instead of exact small sample results. While random-effects methods produce efficient estimates and confidence intervals for the summary effect have correct coverage when the number of studies is sufficiently large, we demonstrate that conventional methods…
Descriptors: Robustness (Statistics), Meta Analysis, Sample Size, Computation
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Brinley N. Zabriskie; Nolan Cole; Jacob Baldauf; Craig Decker – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
Meta-analyses have become the gold standard for synthesizing evidence from multiple clinical trials, and they are especially useful when outcomes are rare or adverse since individual trials often lack sufficient power to detect a treatment effect. However, when zero events are observed in one or both treatment arms in a trial, commonly used…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Error Correction, Computation, Simulation
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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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Maxi Schulz; Malte Kramer; Oliver Kuss; Tim Mathes – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
In sparse data meta-analyses (with few trials or zero events), conventional methods may distort results. Although better-performing one-stage methods have become available in recent years, their implementation remains limited in practice. This study examines the impact of using conventional methods compared to one-stage models by re-analysing…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Data Analysis, Research Methodology, Research Problems
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van Aert, Robbie C. M.; Goos, Cas – Research Synthesis Methods, 2023
The partial correlation coefficient quantifies the relationship between two variables while taking into account the effect of one or multiple control variables. Researchers often want to synthesize partial correlation coefficients in a meta-analysis since these can be readily computed based on the reported results of a linear regression analysis.…
Descriptors: Computation, Sampling, Correlation, Meta Analysis
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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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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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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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Schauer, Jacob M.; Lee, Jihyun; Diaz, Karina; Pigott, Therese D. – Research Synthesis Methods, 2022
Missing covariates is a common issue when fitting meta-regression models. Standard practice for handling missing covariates tends to involve one of two approaches. In a complete-case analysis, effect sizes for which relevant covariates are missing are omitted from model estimation. Alternatively, researchers have employed the so-called…
Descriptors: Statistical Bias, Meta Analysis, Regression (Statistics), Research Problems
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Viechtbauer, Wolfgang; López-López, José Antonio – Research Synthesis Methods, 2022
Heterogeneity is commonplace in meta-analysis. When heterogeneity is found, researchers often aim to identify predictors that account for at least part of such heterogeneity by using mixed-effects meta-regression models. Another potentially relevant goal is to focus on the amount of heterogeneity as a function of one or more predictors, but this…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Models, Predictor Variables, Computation
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Turner, Simon Lee; Korevaar, Elizabeth; Cumpston, Miranda S.; Kanukula, Raju; Forbes, Andrew B.; McKenzie, Joanne E. – Research Synthesis Methods, 2023
Interrupted time series (ITS) studies are frequently used to examine the impact of population-level interventions or exposures. Systematic reviews with meta-analyses including ITS designs may inform public health and policy decision-making. Re-analysis of ITS may be required for inclusion in meta-analysis. While publications of ITS rarely provide…
Descriptors: Quasiexperimental Design, Graphs, Accuracy, Computation
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Noma, Hisashi; Hamura, Yasuyuki; Gosho, Masahiko; Furukawa, Toshi A. – Research Synthesis Methods, 2023
Network meta-analysis has been an essential methodology of systematic reviews for comparative effectiveness research. The restricted maximum likelihood (REML) method is one of the current standard inference methods for multivariate, contrast-based meta-analysis models, but recent studies have revealed the resultant confidence intervals of average…
Descriptors: Network Analysis, Meta Analysis, Regression (Statistics), Error of Measurement
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Riley, Richard D.; Collins, Gary S.; Hattle, Miriam; Whittle, Rebecca; Ensor, Joie – Research Synthesis Methods, 2023
Before embarking on an individual participant data meta-analysis (IPDMA) project, researchers should consider the power of their planned IPDMA conditional on the studies promising their IPD and their characteristics. Such power estimates help inform whether the IPDMA project is worth the time and funding investment, before IPD are collected. Here,…
Descriptors: Computation, Meta Analysis, Participant Characteristics, Data
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Qi, Hongchao; Rizopoulos, Dimitris; Rosmalen, Joost – Research Synthesis Methods, 2023
The meta-analytic-predictive (MAP) approach is a Bayesian method to incorporate historical controls in new trials that aims to increase the statistical power and reduce the required sample size. Here we investigate how to calculate the sample size of the new trial when historical data is available, and the MAP approach is used in the analysis. In…
Descriptors: Sample Size, Computation, Meta Analysis, Bayesian Statistics
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