Meta-analysis of few small studies in orphan diseases

2017 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Meta-analysis of few small studies in orphan diseases​
Friede, T.; Roever, C. ; Wandel, S. & Neuenschwander, B.​ (2017) 
Research Synthesis Methods8(1) pp. 79​-91​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/jrsm.1217 

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Authors
Friede, Tim; Roever, Christian ; Wandel, Simon; Neuenschwander, Beat
Abstract
Meta-analyses in orphan diseases and small populations generally face particular problems, including small numbers of studies, small study sizes and heterogeneity of results. However, the heterogeneity is difficult to estimate if only very few studies are included. Motivated by a systematic review in immunosuppression following liver transplantation in children, we investigate the properties of a range of commonly used frequentist and Bayesian procedures in simulation studies. Furthermore, the consequences for interval estimation of the common treatment effect in random-effects meta-analysis are assessed. The Bayesian credibility intervals using weakly informative priors for the between-trial heterogeneity exhibited coverage probabilities in excess of the nominal level for a range of scenarios considered. However, they tended to be shorter than those obtained by the Knapp-Hartung method, which were also conservative. In contrast, methods based on normal quantiles exhibited coverages well below the nominal levels in many scenarios. With very few studies, the performance of the Bayesian credibility intervals is of course sensitive to the specification of the prior for the between-trial heterogeneity. In conclusion, the use of weakly informative priors as exemplified by half-normal priors (with a scale of 0.5 or 1.0) for log odds ratios is recommended for applications in rare diseases. (C) 2016 The Authors. Research Synthesis Methods published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Issue Date
2017
Status
published
Publisher
Wiley
Journal
Research Synthesis Methods 
ISSN
1759-2887; 1759-2879

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