Abstract

Systematic reviews that collate data about the relative effects of multiple interventions via network meta-analysis are highly informative for decision-making purposes. A network meta-analysis provides two types of findings for a specific outcome: the relative treatment effect for all pairwise comparisons, and a ranking of the treatments. It is important to consider the confidence with which these two types of results can enable clinicians, policy makers and patients to make informed decisions. We propose an approach to determining confidence in the output of a network meta-analysis. Our proposed approach is based on methodology developed by the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) Working Group for pairwise meta-analyses. The suggested framework for evaluating a network meta-analysis acknowledges (i) the key role of indirect comparisons (ii) the contributions of each piece of direct evidence to the network meta-analysis estimates of effect size; (iii) the importance of the transitivity assumption to the validity of network meta-analysis; and (iv) the possibility of disagreement between direct evidence and indirect evidence. We apply our proposed strategy to a systematic review comparing topical antibiotics without steroids for chronically discharging ears with underlying eardrum perforations. The proposed framework can be used to determine confidence in the results from a network meta-analysis. Judgements about evidence from a network meta-analysis can be different from those made about evidence from pairwise meta-analyses.

Highlights

  • A network meta-analysis produces inferences regarding the relative effectiveness or safety of multiple treatments [1,2,3]

  • In this paper we propose an approach to considering the quality of evidence arising from a network meta-analysis, inspired by the methodology developed by the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) Working Group

  • We have proposed a strategy for considering the confidence of results from a network meta-analysis, building on ideas developed by the GRADE Working Group

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Summary

Introduction

A network meta-analysis produces inferences regarding the relative effectiveness or safety of multiple treatments [1,2,3]. The largest contribution to each network estimate is provided by the respective direct evidence, but when direct evidence is missing or is imprecise more information is obtained indirectly These contributions may be interpreted as weights and should be taken into account when evaluating the quality of network evidence for each pairwise comparison. Examining this plot suggests that it might be appropriate to downgrade only by one level (rather than two levels) the network meta-analysis estimate for the CD comparison, because most information (about 74%) for this comes from studies with moderate or low risk of bias. Evaluate the confidence in a specific pairwise effect estimated in network meta-analysis

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