170 likes | 292 Views
Assessing the Empirical Evidence of Associations between Internal Validity and Effect Sizes in Randomized Controlled Trials AHRQ contract HHSA 290 2007 10062 I. Paul G. Shekelle, M.D., Ph.D. Southern California EPC. Bias.
E N D
Assessing the Empirical Evidence of Associations between Internal Validity and Effect Sizes in Randomized Controlled TrialsAHRQ contract HHSA 290 2007 10062 I Paul G. Shekelle, M.D., Ph.D. Southern California EPC
Bias • Widespread belief that design and execution factors are related to bias in trials • Systematic deviation of an estimate, e.g. observed treatment effect in individual study from true value
Quality • These internal validity features for RCTs are commonly used: • Jadad scale (1996): • Randomization • Double-blinding • Description of dropouts • Allocation Concealment (e.g. Colditz et al., 1989) • Assignment generated by independent person not responsible for determining eligibility of patients
Evidence of bias • Schulz et al. (1995) assessed 250 trials in 33 meta-analyses • inadequate concealment of allocation accounted for a 41% increase in effect sizes • Lack of double blinding showed a 17% increase in reported treatment effect • Moher et al. (1998) using 11 meta-analyses including 127 RCTs • Studies with inadequate concealment showed a 37% increased effect compared to concealed treatment allocation trials • “low quality” trials showed a 34% increase in effect
Cochrane Risk of Bias Tool • Recently, Cochrane has proposed a new tool to assess bias: • Sequence generation • Allocation concealment • Blinding of participants, personnel and outcome assessors • Incomplete outcome data • Selective outcome reporting • Other sources of bias • Cochrane also recommends a global summary score
Some Conflicting Evidence • Balk & colleagues (2002) • used 24 existing quality measures and assessed 276 RCTs from 26 meta-analyses • No association of measures with bias across conditions (cardiovascular disease, infectious disease, pediatrics, and surgery) • Wood, Egger, Gluud, Schulz, Juni, Altman, Gluud, Martin, Wood & Sterne (2009) • utilized 146 meta-analyses (1346 RCTs) examining wide range of interventions and outcomes re allocation concealment and reported blinding • Bias effects vary by outcomes
Cochrane Back Group Approach • Extensive quality item list proposed by Cochrane Back Group editorial to assess controlled trials • Randomization sequence • Allocation concealment • Patient blinding • Care provider blinding • Assessor blinding • Dropouts (description, adequateness) • ITT analysis • Selective outcome reporting • Baseline comparability • Similarity of Co-Interventions • Compliance • Timing of outcome assessment
Reviewed 261 Trials 45 Trials Unable to Calculate Effect Size 216 Trials 64% of trials reported short-term pain outcomes 122 Trials compared treatments to placebo/usual care 128 Trials compared treatments to other treatments All RCTs in Cochrane Back Group Reviews
Effect of Internal Validity Items on Bias Effect Size Difference (95% CI) Validity Item Yes No A. randomization 104 112 0.02 (-0.12, 0.16) B. concealment 69 147 -0.08 (-0.23, 0.07) C. baseline differences 135 81 -0.10 (-0.24, 0.05) D. blinding – patient 82 134 -0.03 (-0.18, 0.11) E. blinding - care provider 57 159 -0.10 (-0.26, 0.06) F. blinding – outcome 123 93 -0.10 (-0.25, 0.04) G. co-interventions 92 124 -0.09 (-0.23, 0.05) H. compliance 76 140 -0.01 (-0.15, 0.14) I. dropouts 150 66 -0.13 (-0.29, 0.02) J. timing 198 18 -0.17 (-0.43, 0.10) K. ITT 118 98 -0.10 (-0.24, 0.04) -0.5 -0.3 -0.1 0.1 0.3 0.5 0 Effect Size Difference Higher quality have smaller effect Lower quality have smaller effect
SC EPC Data Sets • Quality and effect sizes of all 267 trials in 15 Meta-Analyses of Cochrane Back Review Group analyzed • Threshold analysis • Significant differences in effect sizes between high and low quality RCTs • Trials of existing EPC evidence reports assessed with extensive quality item list • 166 trials, diverse set of topics, pharmacological therapies / behavior modification interventions • Effects of quality varied across conditions • Including blinding, allocation concealment • No overall effect of quality on effect sizes across conditions or outcomes
New SC EPC Data Set • To investigate the differing results from two large datasets, we are now testing a third dataset where we know that Jadad scale and allocation concealment items influence effect sizes in the expected direction.
Analysis • New dataset can be merged with existing datasets • To investigate effects that were hindered by lack of variance in previous samples • E.g., many trials report not enough information in order to judge the quality feature, large sample needed • To find empirical groupings of quality criteria • Quality features do not seem to be independent from another, e.g. studies with adequate allocation concealment rarely use an inappropriate sequence generation • To investigate factors that can explain the observed differences in results across samples • Moderator effects in meta-regression
Proposed Moderators • Size of overall treatment effect • Strong treatment effect may obliterate effects of quality • Condition being treated • Quality may influence reported effect sizes more in some clinical fields than others • Type of analyzed outcome • E.g., subjective vs. objective data, see also Wood et al. • Variance of quality across studies • Some quality features show little variance across trials (e.g. differential timing very rare) Quality ---------------> Effect Size
Conclusion • Effect of quality feature on individual RCT results important finding • Quality of RCT varies, empirical evidence of bias • Some conflicting results in literature • Some samples show large effects of quality on effect sizes, some show no consistent effect • Current research needs to focus on investigating conditions for risk of bias • when is whichquality feature associated with bias
Recommendations • Pending any new analyses, for now review groups can probably have most confidence in using the following items to assess bias: • Jadad Criteria • Concealment of Allocation Or • Cochrane Risk of Bias Tool