Checking consistency in mixed treatment comparison meta‐analysis
University of Bristol · University of Arizona Cancer Center
Abstract
Pooling of direct and indirect evidence from randomized trials, known as mixed treatment comparisons (MTC), is becoming increasingly common in the clinical literature. MTC allows coherent judgements on which of the several treatments is the most effective and produces estimates of the relative effects of each treatment compared with every other treatment in a network.We introduce two methods for checking consistency of direct and indirect evidence. The first method (back-calculation) infers the contribution of indirect evidence from the direct evidence and the output of an MTC analysis and is useful when the only available data consist of pooled summaries of the pairwise contrasts. The second more general, but…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 38.64
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 36
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Consistency (knowledge bases)
- Computer science
- Meta-analysis
- Statistics
- Econometrics
- Mathematics
- Medicine
- Artificial intelligence