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Generalised Evidence Synthesis. Keith Abrams, Cosetta Minelli, Nicola Cooper & Alex Sutton Medical Statistics Group Department of Health Sciences, University of Leicester, UK. CHEBS Seminar ‘Focusing on the Key Challenges’ Nov 7, 2003. Outline. Why Generalised Evidence Synthesis?
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Generalised Evidence Synthesis Keith Abrams, Cosetta Minelli, Nicola Cooper & Alex Sutton Medical Statistics Group Department of Health Sciences, University of Leicester, UK CHEBS Seminar ‘Focusing on the Key Challenges’ Nov 7, 2003
Outline • Why Generalised Evidence Synthesis? • Bias in observational evidence • Example: Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) & Breast Cancer • Discussion
Why Generalised Evidence Synthesis? • RCT evidence ‘gold standard’ for assessing efficacy (internal validity) • Generalisability of RCT evidence may be difficult (external validity), e.g. CHD & women • Paucity of RCT evidence, e.g. adverse events • Difficult to conduct RCTs in some situations, e.g. policy changes • RCTs have yet to be conducted, but health policy decisions have to be made • Consider totality of evidence-base – (G)ES beyond MA of RCTs
Assessment of Bias in Observational Studies - 1 • Empirical evidence relating to potential extent of bias in observational evidence (Deeks et al. 2003) • Primary studies: • Sacks et al. (1982) & Benson et al. (2000) • Primary & Secondary studies (meta-analyses): • Britton et al. (1998) & MacLehose et al. (2000) • Secondary studies (meta-analyses): • Kunz et al. (1998,2000), Concato et al. (2000) & Ioannidis et al. (2001)
Assessment of Bias in Observational Studies - 2 • Using a random effects meta-epidemiology model (Sterne et al. 2002) • Sacks et al. (1982) & Schultz et al. (1995) ~30% • Ioannidis et al. (2001) ~ 50% • MacLehose et al. (2000) ~ 100% • Deeks et al. (2003) simulation study: comparison of RCTs and historical/concurrent observational studies • Empirical assessment of bias – results similar to previous meta-epidemiological studies • Methods of case-mix adjustment, regression & propensity scores fail to properly account for bias
Approaches to Evidence Synthesis • Treat sources separately, possibly ignoring/downweighting some implicitly • Bayesian approach & treat observational evidence as prior for RCTs & explicit consideration of bias: • Power Transform Prior • Bias Allowance Model • Generalised Evidence Synthesis
Example – HRT • HRT used for relief of menopausal symptoms • Prevention of fractures, especially in women with osteoporosis & low bone mineral density • BUT concerns have been raised over possible increased risk of Breast Cancer
HRT & Breast Cancer – RCT Evidence before July 2002 OR 0.97 95% CI 0.67 to 1.39 Source: Torgerson et al. (2002)
HRT & Breast Cancer – Observational Evidence* All Observational OR 1.18 95% CI 1.10 to 1.26 RCTs OR 0.97 95% CI 0.67 to 1.39 Source: Lancet (1997) * Adjusted for possible confounders
Use of Observational Evidence in Prior Distribution Quasi RCTs Cohort Case-Control Synthesis Empirical Evidence Bias Prior RCTs
Power Transform Prior • Following Ibrahim & Chen (2000) • 0 1 is degree of downweighting • = 0 total discounting • = 1 accept at ‘face value’ • Evaluate for a range of values of
Bias Allowance Model Following Spiegelhalter et al. 2003 • *is unbiased true effect in observational studies • is bias associated with observational evidence • 2 represents a priori beliefs regarding the possible extent of the bias
HRT & Breast Cancer: Evidence – July 2002 HERS II (JAMA July 3) [Follow-up of HERS] • n = 2321 & 29 Breast Cancers • OR 1.08 (95% CI: 0.52 to 2.25) • WHI (JAMA July 17) [Stopped early] • n= 16,608 & 290 Breast Cancers • OR 1.28 (95% CI: 1.01 to 1.62) • HERS II & WHI • OR 1.26 (95% CI: 1.01 to 1.58) • Revised Meta-Analysis of RCTs • WHI 68% weight • OR 1.20 (95% CI: 0.99 to 1.45)
Generalised Evidence Synthesis • Modelling RCT & observational (3 types) evidence directly; • Hierarchical Models (Prevost et al, 2000;Sutton & Abrams, 2001) • Confidence Profiling (Eddy et al, 1990) • Overcomes whether RCTs should form likelihood & observational studies prior
RCTs Quasi RCTs Cohort Case-Control Routine Beliefs Synthesis Generalised Evidence Synthesis Utilities Costs Decision Model
HRT: Hierarchical Model - Results * Ignores study-type
Hierarchical Model - Extensions • Inclusion of empirical assessment of (differential) bias with uncertainty, i.e. distribution • Bias Constraint, e.g. HRT
Discussion – 1 • Direct vs Indirect use of non-RCT evidence • Direct: intervention effect, e.g. RR • Indirect: other model parameters, e.g. correlation between time points • Allowing for bias/adjusting at study-level • IPD if aggregate patient-level covariates are important, e.g. age, prognostic score • Quality – better instruments for non-RCTs & sensitivity of results to instruments
Discussion – 2 • Subjective prior beliefs regarding relative credibility (bias or relevance) of sources of evidence • Elicitation • Bayesian methods provide … • A flexible framework to consider inclusion of all evidence, & … • which is explicit & transparent, BUT … • Require careful & critical application
References Deeks JJ et al. Evaluating non-randomised intervention studies. HTA 2003;7(27). Eddy DM et al.A Bayesian method for synthesizing evidence. The Confidence Profile Method. IJTAHC 1990;6(1):31-55. Ibrahim JG & Chen MH. Power prior distributions for regression models. Stat. Sci. 2000 15(1):46-60. Prevost TC et al. Hierarchical models in generalised synthesis of evidence: an example based on studies of breast cancer. Stat Med 2000;19:3359-76. Sterne JAC et al. Statistical methods for assessing the influence of study characteristics on treatment effects in ‘meta-epidemiological’ research. Stat. Med. 2002;21:1513-1524. Spiegelhalter DJ, Abrams KR, Myles JP. Bayesian Approaches to Clinical Trials & Health-care Evaluation. London: Wiley, 2003. Sutton AJ & Abrams KR. Bayesian methods in meta-analysis and evidence synthesis. SMMR 2001;10(4):277-303.