Abstract

BackgroundTo investigate the prevalence of robust conclusions in systematic reviews addressing missing (participant) outcome data via a novel framework of sensitivity analyses and examine the agreement with the current sensitivity analysis standards.MethodsWe performed an empirical study on systematic reviews with two or more interventions. Pairwise meta-analyses (PMA) and network meta-analyses (NMA) were identified from empirical studies on the reporting and handling of missing outcome data in systematic reviews. PMAs with at least three studies and NMAs with at least three interventions on one primary outcome were considered eligible. We applied Bayesian methods to obtain the summary effect estimates whilst modelling missing outcome data under the missing-at-random assumption and different assumptions about the missingness mechanism in the compared interventions. The odds ratio in the logarithmic scale was considered for the binary outcomes and the standardised mean difference for the continuous outcomes. We calculated the proportion of primary analyses with robust and frail conclusions, quantified by our proposed metric, the robustness index (RI), and current sensitivity analysis standards. Cohen’s kappa statistic was used to measure the agreement between the conclusions derived by the RI and the current sensitivity analysis standards.ResultsOne hundred eight PMAs and 34 NMAs were considered. When studies with a substantial number of missing outcome data dominated the analyses, the number of frail conclusions increased. The RI indicated that 59% of the analyses failed to demonstrate robustness compared to 39% when the current sensitivity analysis standards were employed. Comparing the RI with the current sensitivity analysis standards revealed that two in five analyses yielded contradictory conclusions concerning the robustness of the primary analysis results.ConclusionsCompared with the current sensitivity analysis standards, the RI offers an explicit definition of similar results and does not unduly rely on statistical significance. Hence, it may safeguard against possible spurious conclusions regarding the robustness of the primary analysis results.

Highlights

  • To investigate the prevalence of robust conclusions in systematic reviews addressing missing outcome data via a novel framework of sensitivity analyses and examine the agreement with the current sensitivity analysis standards

  • We investigate the agreement between robustness index (RI) and the current sensitivity analysis standards, which rely on statistical significance

  • Investigating the risk of frail conclusions in Pairwise metaanalyses (PMA) and network meta-analyses (NMA) We investigated the proportion of PMAs and NMAs with questionable conclusions in association with the extent of Missing participant outcome data (MOD)

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Summary

Introduction

To investigate the prevalence of robust conclusions in systematic reviews addressing missing (participant) outcome data via a novel framework of sensitivity analyses and examine the agreement with the current sensitivity analysis standards. The authors of systematic reviews are advised to explore how sensitive the results are to different yet reasonable assumptions about MOD in the compared interventions [9]. Recent evidence on the planning and conduct of sensitivity analysis related to MOD in systematic reviews is underwhelming. Only 6% of the reviews with MOD in the included studies performed a sensitivity analysis [1]. According to Kahale et al [2], only 9% of the reviews reported having performed sensitivity analyses related to MOD, with approximately half of them reporting the actual sensitivity analysis results

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