| Literature DB >> 22008217 |
Julian P T Higgins1, Douglas G Altman, Peter C Gøtzsche, Peter Jüni, David Moher, Andrew D Oxman, Jelena Savovic, Kenneth F Schulz, Laura Weeks, Jonathan A C Sterne.
Abstract
Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22008217 PMCID: PMC3196245 DOI: 10.1136/bmj.d5928
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ ISSN: 0959-8138
Cochrane Collaboration’s tool for assessing risk of bias (adapted from Higgins and Altman13)
| Bias domain | Source of bias | Support for judgment | Review authors’ judgment (assess as low, unclear or high risk of bias) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Selection bias | Random sequence generation | Describe the method used to generate the allocation sequence in sufficient detail to allow an assessment of whether it should produce comparable groups | Selection bias (biased allocation to interventions) due to inadequate generation of a randomised sequence |
| Allocation concealment | Describe the method used to conceal the allocation sequence in sufficient detail to determine whether intervention allocations could have been foreseen before or during enrolment | Selection bias (biased allocation to interventions) due to inadequate concealment of allocations before assignment | |
| Performance bias | Blinding of participants and personnel* | Describe all measures used, if any, to blind trial participants and researchers from knowledge of which intervention a participant received. Provide any information relating to whether the intended blinding was effective | Performance bias due to knowledge of the allocated interventions by participants and personnel during the study |
| Detection bias | Blinding of outcome assessment* | Describe all measures used, if any, to blind outcome assessment from knowledge of which intervention a participant received. Provide any information relating to whether the intended blinding was effective | Detection bias due to knowledge of the allocated interventions by outcome assessment |
| Attrition bias | Incomplete outcome data* | Describe the completeness of outcome data for each main outcome, including attrition and exclusions from the analysis. State whether attrition and exclusions were reported, the numbers in each intervention group (compared with total randomised participants), reasons for attrition or exclusions where reported, and any reinclusions in analyses for the review | Attrition bias due to amount, nature, or handling of incomplete outcome data |
| Reporting bias | Selective reporting | State how selective outcome reporting was examined and what was found | Reporting bias due to selective outcome reporting |
| Other bias | Anything else, ideally prespecified | State any important concerns about bias not covered in the other domains in the tool | Bias due to problems not covered elsewhere |
*Assessments should be made for each main outcome or class of outcomes.
Example of risk of bias table from a Cochrane review14
| Bias | Authors’ judgment | Support for judgment |
|---|---|---|
| Random sequence generation (selection bias) | Low risk | Quote: “Randomization was one to one with a block of size 6. The list of randomization was obtained using the SAS procedure plan at the data statistical analysis centre” |
| Allocation concealment (selection bias) | Unclear risk | The randomisation list was created at the statistical data centre, but further description of allocation is not included |
| Blinding of participants and researchers (performance bias) | High risk | Open label |
| Blinding of outcome assessment (detection bias) | High risk | Open label |
| Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias) | Low risk | Losses to follow-up were disclosed and the analyses were conducted using, firstly, a modified intention to treat analysis in which missing=failures and, secondly, on an observed basis. Although the authors describe an intention to treat analysis, the 139 participants initially randomised were not all included; five were excluded (four withdrew and one had lung cancer diagnosed). This is a reasonable attrition and not expected to affect results. Adequate sample size of 60 per group was achieved |
| Selective reporting (reporting bias) | Low risk | All prespecified outcomes were reported |
| Other bias | Unclear risk | No description of the uptake of the therapeutic drug monitoring recommendations by physicians, which could result in performance bias |

Fig 1 Example presentation of risk of bias assessments for studies in a Cochrane review of therapeutic monitoring of antiretroviral drugs in people with HIV14
Approach to formulating summary assessments of risk of bias for each important outcome (across domains) within and across trials (adapted from Higgins and Altman13)
| Risk of bias | Interpretation | Within a trial | Across trials |
|---|---|---|---|
| Low risk of bias | Bias, if present, is unlikely to alter the results seriously | Low risk of bias for all key domains | Most information is from trials at low risk of bias |
| Unclear risk of bias | A risk of bias that raises some doubt about the results | Low or unclear risk of bias for all key domains | Most information is from trials at low or unclear risk of bias |
| High risk of bias | Bias may alter the results seriously | High risk of bias for one or more key domains | The proportion of information from trials at high risk of bias is sufficient to affect the interpretation of results |