articleInternational Journal of EpidemiologySep 29, 2008Closed access

Can trial sequential monitoring boundaries reduce spurious inferences from meta-analyses?

University of Ioannina

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Background

Results from apparently conclusive meta-analyses may be false. A limited number of events from a few small trials and the associated random error may be under-recognized sources of spurious findings. The information size (IS, i.e. number of participants) required for a reliable and conclusive meta-analysis should be no less rigorous than the sample size of a single, optimally powered randomized clinical trial. If a meta-analysis is conducted before a sufficient IS is reached, it should be evaluated in a manner that accounts for the increased risk that the result might represent a chance finding (i.e. applying trial sequential monitoring boundaries).

Methods

We analysed 33 meta-analyses with a sufficient IS to detect a treatment effect of 15% relative risk reduction (RRR). We successively monitored the results of the meta-analyses by generating interim cumulative meta-analyses after each included trial and evaluated their results using a conventional statistical criterion (alpha = 0.05) and two-sided Lan-DeMets monitoring boundaries. We examined the proportion of false positive results and important inaccuracies in estimates of treatment effects that resulted from the two approaches.

Citation impact

865
total citations
FWCI
27.18
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100%
References
82
Citations per year

Authors

9

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Spurious relationship
  • Meta-analysis
  • Medicine
  • Inference
  • MEDLINE
  • Econometrics
  • Statistics
  • Computer science
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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