Abstract

The limited availability of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in nephrology undermines causal inferences in meta-analyses. Systematic reviews of observational studies have grown more common under such circumstances. We conducted systematic reviews of all comparative observational studies in nephrology from 2006 to 2016 to assess the trends in the past decade. We then focused on the meta-analyses combining observational studies and RCTs to evaluate the systematic differences in effect estimates between study designs using two statistical methods: by estimating the ratio of odds ratios (ROR) of the pooled OR obtained from observational studies versus those from RCTs and by examining the discrepancies in their statistical significance. The number of systematic reviews of observational studies in nephrology had grown by 11.7-fold in the past decade. Among 56 records combining observational studies and RCTs, ROR suggested that the estimates between study designs agreed well (ROR 1.05, 95% confidence interval 0.90–1.23). However, almost half of the reviews led to discrepant interpretations in terms of statistical significance. In conclusion, the findings based on ROR might encourage researchers to justify the inclusion of observational studies in meta-analyses. However, caution is needed, as the interpretations based on statistical significance were less concordant than those based on ROR.

Highlights

  • The limited availability of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in nephrology undermines causal inferences in meta-analyses

  • Recent meta-analyses which compared observational studies with RCTs based their conclusions on the ratio of odds ratios (ROR) between the pooled OR derived from observational studies and those derived from RCTs, whereas most clinical studies generally interpret efficacy based on statistical s­ ignificance[18,19,20,21,22]

  • Our findings indicate that the number of systematic reviews of observational studies in nephrology have dramatically increased in the past decade, especially from China and the United States of America (USA)

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Summary

Introduction

The limited availability of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in nephrology undermines causal inferences in meta-analyses. Unmeasured confounding factors can hamper causal inferences between the exposure and ­outcome[16,17] Despite such controversy, several studies reported that risk estimates obtained from meta-analyses of observational studies did not differ from those from R­ CTs14,18,19. In the present study, we aimed to (1) assess the trends and characteristics of systematic reviews of observational studies in nephrology in the past decade; and (2) quantify systematic differences in effect estimates between observational studies and RCTs in meta-analyses using two statistical methods: ROR, and discrepancies in statistical significance between the two study designs among meta-analyses combining observational studies and RCTs

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