Abstract
Network meta-analysis (NMA) expands the scope of a conventional pairwise meta-analysis to simultaneously compare multiple treatments, which has an inherent appeal for clinicians, patients, and policy decision makers. Two recent reports have shown that the impact of excluding a treatment on NMAs can be substantial. However, no one has assessed the impact of excluding a trial from NMAs, which is important because many NMAs selectively include trials in the analysis. This article empirically examines the impact of trial exclusion using both the arm-based (AB) and contrast-based (CB) approaches, by reanalyzing 20 published NMAs involving 725 randomized controlled trials and 449,325 patients. For the population-averaged absolute risk estimates using the AB approach, the average fold changes across all networks ranged from 1.004 (with standard deviation 0.004) to 1.072 (with standard deviation 0.184); while the maximal fold changes ranged from 1.032 to 2.349. In 12 out of 20 NMAs, a 1.20-fold or larger change is observed in at least one of the population-averaged absolute risk estimates. In addition, while excluding a trial can substantially change the estimated relative effects (e.g., log odds ratios), there is no systematic difference in terms of changes between the two approaches. Changes in treatment rankings are observed in 7 networks and changes in inconsistency are observed in 3 networks. We do not observe correlations between changes in treatment effects, treatment rankings and inconsistency. Finally, we recommend rigorous inclusion and exclusion criteria, logical study selection process, and reasonable network geometry to ensure robustness and generalizability of the results of NMAs.
Highlights
In clinical practice, and at a wider societal level, treatment decisions need to consider all available evidence
We reviewed the Network meta-analysis (NMA) studied by Veroniki et al [10], which searched in PubMed for articles published between March 1997 and February 2011 in which any form of indirect comparison was applied, according to the articles’ titles or abstracts
It is common for NMAs to exclude specific trials and treatment arms based on diverse criteria [8], some limitations and preferences
Summary
At a wider societal level, treatment decisions need to consider all available evidence. Network meta-analysis (NMA) expands the scope of a conventional pairwise meta-analysis to simultaneously compare multiple treatment options [1,2,3,4] by collectively synthesizing direct evidence within trials and indirect evidence across trials. One may be interested in comparing two treatments A and B. The Impact of Excluding Trials from NMA PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0165889 December 7, 2016
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