Influence of reported study design characteristics on intervention effect estimates from randomised controlled trials: combined analysis of meta-epidemiological studies.
University of Bristol · Centre for Mental Health · +13 more institutions
Abstract
The design of randomised controlled trials (RCTs) should incorporate characteristics (such as concealment of randomised allocation and blinding of participants and personnel) that avoid biases resulting from lack of comparability of the intervention and control groups. Empirical evidence suggests that the absence of such characteristics leads to biased intervention effect estimates, but the findings of different studies are not consistent.
To examine the influence of unclear or inadequate random sequence generation and allocation concealment, and unclear or absent double blinding, on intervention effect estimates and between-trial heterogeneity, and whether or not these influences vary with type of clinical area, intervention, comparison and outcome measure. DATA SOURCES AND METHODS: Data were combined from seven contributing meta-epidemiological studies (collections of meta-analyses in which trial characteristics are assessed and results recorded). The resulting database was used to identify and remove overlapping meta-analyses. Outcomes were coded such that odds ratios
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 63.17
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 111
Authors
18Topics & keywords
- Blinding
- Medicine
- Meta-analysis
- Randomized controlled trial
- Odds ratio
- Epidemiology
- Clinical trial
- Study heterogeneity
- Good health and well-being