| Literature DB >> 19036172 |
Gerta Rücker1, Guido Schwarzer, James R Carpenter, Martin Schumacher.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The heterogeneity statistic I(2), interpreted as the percentage of variability due to heterogeneity between studies rather than sampling error, depends on precision, that is, the size of the studies included.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 19036172 PMCID: PMC2648991 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2288-8-79
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
Properties of measures of heterogeneity.
| Measure | measured on | increasing with | ||
| scale | range | number of studies in meta-analysis | precision (size of studies) | |
| absolute | [0, ∞) | yes | yes | |
| percent | [0, 100%] | no | yes | |
| outcome | [0, ∞) | no | no | |
| absolute | [1, ∞) | no | yes | |
| absolute | [1, ∞) | no | yes | |
Figure 1Top left panel: Meta-analysis of thrombolytic therapy in acute myocardial infarction [14]. Other plots: illustrative randomly sampled versions of the same meta-analysis with sample-size inflation factors of M = 4, 16 and 64 (details in text).
Effect of increasing within trial precision (factor M) on heterogeneity measures (data in [14]).
| Factor | Measure | |||
| 1 | 0.018 | 85 (0.0953) | 18.6% [0%; 40.1%] | 1.11 [1; 1.29] |
| 4 | 0.008 | 98 (0.0135) | 29.2% [4.5%; 47.6%] | 1.19 [1.02; 1.38] |
| 16 | 0.027 | 454 (<0.0001) | 84.8% [81.4%; 87.5%] | 2.56 [2.32; 2.83] |
| 64 | 0.028 | 1708 (<0.0001) | 96.0% [95.4%; 96.5%] | 4.98 [4.65; 5.32] |
Figure 2Within-study variation, decreasing with increasing sample size while heterogeneity remains constant. Details in text.
Figure 3Percentageof variation due to heterogeneity rather than to sampling error against sample size (same simulation data as in Figure 2).
Figure 4against median study size in a sample of 157 meta-analyses. Light, grey and black dots and regression lines correspond to the first, second and third tercile of the distribution of τ2.
Ranges for interpretation of I2 following the Cochrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews of Interventions (Version 5.0.1) [23].
| 0% to 40% | might not be important |
| 30% to 60% | may represent moderate heterogeneity |
| 50% to 90% | may represent substantial heterogeneity |
| 75% to 100% | considerable heterogeneity |