Abstract

IntroductionMagnitudes of change in endothelial function research can be articulated using effect size statistics. Effect sizes are commonly used in reference to Cohen’s seminal guidelines of small (d = 0.2), medium (d = 0.5), and large (d = 0.8). Quantitative analyses of effect size distributions across various research disciplines have revealed values differing from Cohen’s original recommendations. Here we examine effect size distributions in human endothelial function research, and the magnitude of small, medium, and large effects for macro and microvascular endothelial function.MethodsEffect sizes reported as standardized mean differences were extracted from meta research available for endothelial function. A frequency distribution was constructed to sort effect sizes. The 25th, 50th, and 75th percentiles were used to derive small, medium, and large effects. Group sample sizes and publication year from primary studies were also extracted to observe any potential trends, related to these factors, in effect size reporting in endothelial function research.ResultsSeven hundred fifty-two effect sizes were extracted from eligible meta-analyses. We determined small (d = 0.28), medium (d = 0.69), and large (d = 1.21) effects for endothelial function that corresponded to the 25th, 50th, and 75th percentile of the data distribution.ConclusionOur data indicate that direct application of Cohen’s guidelines would underestimate the magnitude of effects in human endothelial function research. This investigation facilitates future a priori power analyses, provides a practical guiding benchmark for the contextualization of an effect when no other information is available, and further encourages the reporting of effect sizes in endothelial function research.

Highlights

  • Magnitudes of change in endothelial function research can be articulated using effect size statistics

  • We found different effect size distributions from the arterial

  • We found that the median statistical power to detect the reported summary effect size was approximately 66.6%

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Summary

Introduction

Magnitudes of change in endothelial function research can be articulated using effect size statistics. We examine effect size distributions in human endothelial function research, and the magnitude of small, medium, and large effects for macro and microvascular endothelial function. Measures of endothelial function are commonly derived from data that quantify changes in vasomotor capacity and blood flow [2, 3]. Such data can be treated using traditional frequency-based. The use of effect sizes in biomedical literature has increased over the last two decades (Fig. 1) Effect sizes, such as standardized mean differences (SMD), facilitate a priori power analyses, articulate the magnitude. Cherubini and MacDonald Artery Res information is available, and further encourage the reporting of effect sizes in human endothelial function research.

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