Abstract

In meta-analysis, between-study heterogeneity indicates the presence of effect-modifiers and has implications for the interpretation of results in cost-effectiveness analysis and decision making. A distinction is usually made between true variability in treatment effects due to variation in patient populations or settings and biases related to the way in which trials were conducted. Variability in relative treatment effects threatens the external validity of trial evidence and limits the ability to generalize from the results; imperfections in trial conduct represent threats to internal validity. We provide guidance on methods for meta-regression and bias-adjustment, in pairwise and network meta-analysis (including indirect comparisons), using illustrative examples. We argue that the predictive distribution of a treatment effect in a “new” trial may, in many cases, be more relevant to decision making than the distribution of the mean effect. Investigators should consider the relative contribution of true variability and random variation due to biases when considering their response to heterogeneity. In network meta-analyses, various types of meta-regression models are possible when trial-level effect-modifying covariates are present or suspected. We argue that a model with a single interaction term is the one most likely to be useful in a decision-making context. Illustrative examples of Bayesian meta-regression against a continuous covariate and meta-regression against “baseline” risk are provided. Annotated WinBUGS code is set out in an appendix.

Keywords

CovariatePairwise comparisonMeta-regressionContext (archaeology)EconometricsBayesian probabilityMeta-analysisRegressionRegression analysisStatisticsComputer scienceStudy heterogeneityBayes' theoremMachine learningArtificial intelligenceMathematicsConfidence intervalMedicine

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Publication Info

Year
2013
Type
article
Volume
33
Issue
5
Pages
618-640
Citations
442
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Closed

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Sofia Dias, Alex J. Sutton, Nicky J. Welton et al. (2013). Evidence Synthesis for Decision Making 3. Medical Decision Making , 33 (5) , 618-640. https://doi.org/10.1177/0272989x13485157

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DOI
10.1177/0272989x13485157