| Literature DB >> 29776394 |
Humam Saltaji1, Susan Armijo-Olivo2, Greta G Cummings3, Maryam Amin4, Bruno R da Costa5,6, Carlos Flores-Mir7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recent methodologic evidence suggests that lack of blinding in randomized trials can result in under- or overestimation of the treatment effect size. The objective of this study is to quantify the extent of bias associated with blinding in randomized controlled trials of oral health interventions.Entities:
Keywords: Bias; Meta-analysis; Randomized controlled trial; Research methodology; Study quality
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29776394 PMCID: PMC5960173 DOI: 10.1186/s12874-018-0491-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
Guidelines for quality assessment of included trials [7, 31–37, 63]
| Items /Definitions | Yes | No | Unclear |
|---|---|---|---|
| Performance Bias | |||
| Patient blinding [ | Any one of the following: | Any one of the following: | Any one of the following: |
| Blinded therapist/care-provider | The study describes in the title, abstract, or text that the therapists/care-providers were blinded. The blinding was appropriate. | The study describes in the title, abstract, or text that the therapists/care-providers were not blinded, or because of the nature of the intervention (e.g., exercise prescription or supervision, etc.), the therapist could not be blinded. | There is insufficient information to permit a judgment. |
| Blinded principal-investigator | The study describes in the title, abstract, or text that the investigator was blinded. The blinding was appropriate. | The study describes in the title, abstract, or text that the investigator was not blinded. | There is insufficient information to permit a judgment. |
| Blinded statistician | The study describes in the title, abstract, or text that the statistician was blinded. The blinding was appropriate. | The study describes in the title, abstract, or text that the statistician was not blinded. | There is insufficient information to permit a judgment. |
| Detection Bias | |||
| Assessor blinding [ | Any one of the following: | Any one of the following: | Any one of the following: |
| Detection/Performance Bias | |||
| Blinding of both patients and assessors) [ | Both patient blinding and assessor blinding were judged as having low risk of bias. | Both patient blinding and assessor blinding were judged as having high risk of bias | Both patient blinding and assessor blinding were judged as having unclear risk of bias. |
| Study described as double blind | “Double blind” is the description in the study related to “blindness.” | Not described as double blind. | There is insufficient information to permit a judgment. |
| blinding of patients, assessors, and caregivers concurrently | Both patient blinding and assessor blinding were judged as having low risk of bias. Also, care-providers are blinded. | Both patient blinding and assessor blinding were judged as having high risk of bias. Also, care-providers are not blinded. | Both patient blinding and assessor blinding were judged as having unclear risk of bias. Also, care-providers are judged as “unclear”. |
| The method of blinding was appropriate | The authors use the blinding method appropriately. | There is no blinding or incomplete blinding is performed, and the outcome or outcome measurement is likely to be influenced by lack of blinding. | There is insufficient information to permit a judgment. |
Blinding in randomized trials of oral health interventions (N = 540)
| Domain | Risk of Bias Assessment, N (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Low Risk | High Risk | Unclear Risk | |
| Blinding of patients/participants | 386 (71.5) | 7 (1.3) | 147 (27.2) |
| Blinding of assessors | 321 (59.4) | 16 (3.0) | 203 (37.6) |
| Blinding of both patients and assessorsa | 273 (72.8) | 7 (1.9) | 95 (25.3) |
| Blinding of patients, assessors, and care-providers concurrentlyb | 117 (76.5) | 7 (4.6) | 29 (19.0) |
| Item | Quality Assessment, N (%) | ||
| Yes | No | Unclear/Not reported | |
| Study described as double-blind | 181 (33.5) | 358 (66.3) | 1 (0.2) |
| Blinding of assessors | 321 (59.4) | 16 (3.0) | 203 (37.6) |
| Blinding of patients | 192 (35.6) | 69 (12.8) | 279 (51.7) |
| Blinding of therapists/care-providers | 134 (24.8) | 356 (65.9) | 50 (9.3) |
| Blinding of principal investigator | 33 (6.1) | 10 (1.9) | 497 (92.0) |
| Blinding of data analyst | 9 (1.7) | 3 (0.6) | 528 (97.8) |
| Method of blinding appropriate | 286 (53) | 17 (3.1) | 237 (43.9) |
aDoes not equal 100% for overall, as the item was not applicable in 165 trials
bDoes not equal 100% for overall, as the item was not applicable in 387 trials
Type of blinding in randomized trials of oral health interventions (N = 540); N (%)
| Component | Random allocation | Hypothesis | Details of intervention | Outcome assessment | Data analysis | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes | No | Unclear/NR | Yes | No | Unclear/NR | Yes | No | Unclear/NR | Yes | No | Unclear/NR | Yes | No | Unclear/NR | |
| Participants | 194 (35.93) | 70 (12.96) | 276 (51.11) | 1 | 12 (2.22) | 527 | 2 (0.37) | 221 (40.93) | 317 | 0 | 71 | 469 (86.85) | 0 | 0 | 540 |
| Assessors | 322 | 15 | 203 (37.59) | 1 (0.19) | 11 | 528 | 8 (1.48) | 37 | 495 | NA | NA | NA | 0 | 0 | 540 |
| Principal Investigator | 32 | 10 (1.85) | 498 (92.22) | 0 | 0 | 540 | 0 | 0 | 540 | 1 (0.19) | 2 | 533 | 0 | 0 | 540 |
| Care-providers | 136 (25.19) | 351 (65.00) | 53 | 2 | 10 | 528 (97.78) | 0 | 0 | 540 | 1 | 16 | 523 | 0 | 0 | 540 |
| Statisticians | 9 | 3 | 528 | 1 | 0 | 539 (99.81) | 0 | 0 | 540 | 0 | 0 | 540 | NA | NA | NA |
NA not applicable, NR not reported
Fig. 1Difference in treatment ES estimates between trials with presence and lack of patient blinding. A positive value (more than zero) across meta-analyses indicates that treatment ES estimates are larger in trials that lack patient blinding compared to trials with adequate patient blinding. Diamond, difference in treatment ES estimate between trial components across all meta-analyses; square, proportional to weight used in meta-meta-analysis; horizontal arrow/line, a 95% confidence interval; solid vertical line, line of no difference in treatment ES estimate
Fig. 2Difference in treatment ES estimates, stratified by meta-analyses characteristics, between: (a) trials with presence and lack of patient blinding; (b) trials with presence and lack of assessor blinding; (c) trials with presence and lack of care-provider blinding; (d) trials with and without principal-investigator blinding. Square, proportional to weight used in meta-meta-analysis; horizontal arrow/line, a 95% confidence interval; solid vertical line, line of no difference in treatment ES estimate
Fig. 3Difference in treatment ES estimate between trials with presence and lack of assessor blinding. A positive value (more than zero) across meta-analyses indicates that lack of assessor blinding inflates the treatment ES estimate when compared with trials with adequate assessor blinding. Diamond, difference in treatment ES estimate between trial components across all meta-analyses; square, proportional to weight used in meta-meta-analysis; horizontal arrow/line, a 95% confidence interval; solid vertical line, line of no difference in treatment ES estimate
Fig. 4Difference in treatment ES estimate between: (a) trials with presence and lack of care-provider blinding (a positive value across meta-analyses indicates that the lack of care-provider blinding inflates the treatment ES estimate when compared with trials with adequate care-provider blinding); (b) trials with presence and lack of principal-investigator blinding (a positive value across meta-analyses indicates that the lack of principal-investigator blinding inflates the treatment ES estimate when compared with trials with adequate principal investigator blinding). Diamond, difference in treatment ES estimate between trial components across all meta-analyses; square, proportional to weight used in meta-meta-analysis; horizontal arrow/line, a 95% confidence interval; solid vertical line, line of no difference in treatment ES estimate
Fig. 5Difference in treatment ES estimate between trials with presence and lack of “double-blinded” description. A positive value (more than zero) across meta-analyses indicates that trials not described as “double-blinded” inflate the treatment ES estimate when compared with trials described as “double blinded”. Diamond, difference in treatment ES estimate between trial components across all meta-analyses; square, proportional to weight used in meta-meta-analysis; horizontal arrow/line, a 95% confidence interval; solid vertical line, line of no difference in treatment ES estimate
Fig. 6Difference in treatment ES estimates, stratified by meta-analyses characteristics, between: (a) trials with presence and lack of “double-blinded” description; (b) trials with and without blinding of both patients and assessors; (c) trials with and without blinding of patients, assessors, and care providers concurrently; (d) trials with and without appropriate method of blinding. Square, proportional to weight used in meta-meta-analysis; horizontal arrow/line, a 95% confidence interval; solid vertical line, line of no difference in treatment ES estimate
Fig. 7Difference in treatment ES estimate between: (a) trials with and without blinding of both patients and assessors (a positive value, more than zero, across meta-analyses indicates that lack of blinding of both patients and assessors inflates the treatment ES estimate when compared with trials with adequate blinding of patients and assessors); (b) trials with and without blinding of patients, assessors, and care providers (a positive value, more than zero, across meta-analyses indicates that lack of blinding of patients, assessors, and care providers inflates the treatment ES estimate when compared with trials adequately blinded in the three components). Diamond, difference in treatment ES estimate between trial components across all meta-analyses; square, proportional to weight used in meta-meta-analysis; horizontal arrow/line, a 95% confidence interval; solid vertical line, line of no difference in treatment ES estimate
Fig. 8Difference in treatment ES estimate between trials with and appropriate method of blinding (a positive value, more than zero, across meta-analyses indicates that lack of an appropriate method of blinding inflates the treatment ES estimate). Diamond, difference in treatment ES estimate between trial components across all meta-analyses; square, proportional to weight used in meta-meta-analysis; horizontal arrow/line, a 95% confidence interval; solid vertical line, line of no difference in treatment ES estimate