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Journal ArticleDOI

A new strategy for meta‐analysis of continuous covariates in observational studies

TLDR
A new strategy, requiring individual participant data, to provide a summary estimate of the functional relationship between a continuous covariate and the outcome in a regression model, adjusting for confounding factors is proposed.
Abstract
When several studies are available, a meta-analytic assessment of the effect of a risk or prognostic factor on an outcome is often required. We propose a new strategy, requiring individual participant data, to provide a summary estimate of the functional relationship between a continuous covariate and the outcome in a regression model, adjusting for confounding factors. Our procedure comprises three steps. First, we determine a confounder model. Ideally, the latter should include the same variables across studies, but this may be impossible. Next, we estimate the functional form for the continuous variable of interest in each study, adjusted for the confounder model. Finally, we combine the individual functions by weighted averaging to obtain a summary estimate of the function. Fractional polynomial methodology and pointwise weighted averaging of functions are the key components. In contrast to a pooled analysis, our approach can reflect more variability between functions from different studies and more flexibility with respect to confounders. We illustrate the procedure by using data from breast cancer patients in the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Program database, where we consider data from nine individual registries as separate studies. We estimate the functional forms for the number of positive lymph nodes and age. The former is an example where a strong prognostic effect has long been recognized, whereas the prognostic effect of the latter is weak or even controversial. We further discuss some general issues that are found in meta-analyses of observational studies.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Multivariate meta-analysis for non-linear and other multi-parameter associations.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors formalize the application of multivariate meta-analysis and meta-regression to synthesize estimates of multi-parameter associations obtained from different studies, and propose a two-stage analysis for investigating the non-linear exposure-response relationship between temperature and non-accidental mortality using time-series data from multiple cities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Meta-analysis using individual participant data: one-stage and two-stage approaches, and why they may differ.

TL;DR: This tutorial paper outlines the key statistical methods for one‐stage and two‐stage IPD meta‐analyses, and provides 10 key reasons why they may produce different summary results, and explains that most differences arise because of different modelling assumptions.
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A critical review of methods for the assessment of patient-level interactions in individual participant data meta-analysis of randomized trials, and guidance for practitioners.

TL;DR: The choice of method for investigating interactions in IPD meta-analysis is driven mainly by whether across-trial information is considered for inclusion, a decision, which depends on balancing possible improvement in power with an increased risk of bias.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of CPAP on blood pressure in patients with minimally symptomatic obstructive sleep apnoea: a meta-analysis using individual patient data from four randomised controlled trials

TL;DR: Although CPAP treatment reduces OSA severity and sleepiness, it seems not to have a beneficial effect on BP in patients with minimally symptomatic OSA, except in patients who used CPAP for >4 h/night.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Meta-Analysis in Clinical Trials*

TL;DR: This paper examines eight published reviews each reporting results from several related trials in order to evaluate the efficacy of a certain treatment for a specified medical condition and suggests a simple noniterative procedure for characterizing the distribution of treatment effects in a series of studies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Meta-Analysis: A Constantly Evolving Research Integration Tool

TL;DR: The four articles in this special section onMeta-analysis illustrate some of the complexities entailed in meta-analysis methods and contributes both to advancing this methodology and to the increasing complexities that can befuddle researchers.
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An introduction to meta-analysis.

TL;DR: This paper reviews the use ofMeta-Analysis as a data pooling technique in a non-technical manner and illustrates the type of information that can be obtained from a Meta-Analysis, that is not conventionally available from individual trials.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the Practice of Dichotomization of Quantitative Variables

TL;DR: The authors present the case that dichotomization is rarely defensible and often will yield misleading results.
Journal ArticleDOI

Breast cancer and hormone replacement therapy: collaborative reanalysis of data from 51 epidemiological studies of 52 705 women with breast cancer and 108 411 women without breast cancer

Eugenia E. Calle, +194 more
- 11 Oct 1997 - 
TL;DR: Of the many factors examined that might affect the relation between breast cancer risk and use of HRT, only a woman's weight and body-mass index had a material effect: the increase in the relative risk of breast cancer diagnosed in women using HRT and associated with long durations of use in current and recent users was greater for women of lower than of higher weight or body- mass index.
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