| Literature DB >> 25117057 |
Paul P Glasziou1, Iain Chalmers2, Sally Green3, Susan Michie4.
Abstract
Paul Glasziou and colleagues discuss methods to guide selection of an intervention from individual trials within a systematic review. Please see later in the article for the Editors' Summary.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25117057 PMCID: PMC4130663 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001690
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Definitions and methods of the three basic approaches for intervention synthesis.
| Attribute | Single-Trial-Based Choice | Common Components Hybrid | Model-Guided Synthesis |
| Description | Pick (or rank) the “best” intervention(s) from those used across all trials | Develop a composite intervention based on components of the interventions in all trials | Analyse interventions guided by a model of the mechanisms of action |
| Processes | Establish decision criteria, who is going to do the ranking, and how consensus is to be achieved | List all components, code components from trials, and select common components | Propose mechanism, code trial interventions, and conduct subgroup analyses or meta-regression |
| Output | Ranked trial interventions, consensus data, and selected single intervention | Composite intervention derived from all interventions | A single study intervention or a composite |
| Assumptions and requirements | Minimal assumption: at least some interventions replicable; requires agreement about criteria for “best” | Requires that sufficient details of interventions can be obtained | Requires that sufficient details of interventions can be obtained, and sufficient diversity of studies to allow analysis such as meta-regression |
| Limitations | Intervention options confined to those tested in the trials; depends on achieving consensus | Not possible for “indivisible” interventions; composite intervention has not been tested in any of the trials | Not possible for “indivisible” interventions; depends on having sufficiently large dataset for meta-regression, and on the validity of the chosen theoretical mechanism |
| Effort | Minimal; consensus exercise and analysis | Several person-months of work | Several person-months of work |
Figure 1Trials of pedometer interventions to increase physical activity [18]: table of intervention elements of studies with forest plot of effect.
Figure 2Example of the control theory model used for coding interventions in a review of audit and feedback studies by Gardner et al. [16].
Figure 3The steps from systematic review to a specific version of an intervention, showing the three basic approaches.