| Literature DB >> 30940766 |
Lorenzo Bertizzolo1,2, Patrick Bossuyt2, Ignacio Atal1,3, Philippe Ravaud1,3,4,5,6, Agnes Dechartres7.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Assess the frequency and reasons for disagreements in risk of bias assessments for randomised controlled trials (RCTs) included in more than one Cochrane review.Entities:
Keywords: cochrane; interrater agreement; public health; reproducibility; risk of bias; systematic reviews
Year: 2019 PMID: 30940766 PMCID: PMC6500379 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-028382
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Flow chart of the selection process. RCT, randomised controlled trial.
Figure 2Distribution of agreements and disagreements for the different risk of bias items analysed; raw number and percentage of the total. For disagreements, distribution of the different discrepancies.
Figure 3Classification of disagreements for the different items; raw number and percentage of the total.
Main reasons for disagreements in cases of a different interpretation of the same information
| Risk of bias Item | Main reasons for disagreements | N (%)* | Examples of support for judgement from the review† |
| Random sequence generation | Consider differently incomplete or unclear description | 73 (83) | ‘States ‘cluster randomisation by computer’’; Low risk of bias |
| Confusion with allocation concealment | 9 (10) | ‘Allocation was done using sealed envelopes containing name of one of the two groups.’; Low risk of bias | |
| Allocation concealment | Consider differently incomplete or unclear description | 49 (33) | ‘Not specified.’; High risk of bias |
| Consider differently envelopes description | 26 (17) | ‘Sequentially numbered sealed envelopes’. Does not state if opaque envelopes.’; Unclear risk of bias | |
| Random sequence generated by computer or external centre considered enough for low risk | 21 (14) | ‘Treatment was allocated based on the computer-generated no list.’; Low risk of bias | |
| Confusion in the definition of the item | 19 (13) | ‘Researchers attempted to contact all patients seen by physicians during 1 month’; High risk of bias | |
| Confusion with blinding | 15 (10) | ‘Participants were told to which compound they had been allocated.’; High risk of bias | |
| Confusion with random sequence generation | 6 (4) | ‘Computer-generated randomised lists.’; Low risk of bias | |
| Blinding of participants and personnel | Assess risk differently if blinding was not feasible because of the type of intervention | 20 (36) | ‘Not possible to blind participants’; Low risk of bias |
| Outcome considered not influenced by blinding | 12 (21) |
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| Consider differently information of ‘double blind’ | 9 (16) | ‘Quote: ‘ … patients were randomised in double-blind conditions … ‘Comment: probably done’; Low risk of bias | |
| Consider differently incomplete or unclear description | 7 (12) | ‘Researchers were blind until after the baseline assessment. participants were not blinded.’; Unclear risk of bias | |
| Confusion in the definition of the item | 5 (9) | ‘Described as an ‘open-label’ pilot study.’; Low risk of bias | |
| Blinding of outcome assessment | Consider differently incomplete or unclear description | 24 (34) | ‘Not explicitly discussed in the publish study, it was assumed to be open label’; High risk of bias |
| Outcome considered not influenced by blinding | 16 (23) | ‘Not stated, but it was unlikely that the outcome was influenced by lack of blinding’; Low risk of bias | |
| Consider differently patient-reported outcomes when patients are blinded or not to the intervention | 9 (13) | ‘Comment: depression assessed by patient self-report’; High risk of bias | |
| Consider differently information of ‘double blind’ | 9 (13) | ‘Quote: ‘ … double blind’ Comment: probably done’; Low risk of bias | |
| Assess risk differently if blinding was not feasible because of the type of intervention | 6 (9) | ‘Blinding not possible due to intervention’; High risk of bias | |
| Incomplete outcome data | Use different cut-off for the rate of missing data | 57 (26) | ‘11 withdrawals (10%).’; Low risk of bias |
| Focus on no versus reasons/precise report of missing data | 28 (13) | ‘20 drop-outs (27.2%) with 4 deaths (3 males, 1 female) from cardiovascular events’; High risk of bias | |
| Consider differently incomplete or unclear description | 27 (12) | ‘Women who were untraceable or unsuitable for follow-up were excluded, other losses included as smokers’; Low risk of bias | |
| Consider differently intention-to-treat (ITT) analysis | 25 (11) |
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| Consider differently report of ‘no missing data’ | 22 (10) |
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| Consider differently imputation of missing data | 20 (9) | ‘Imputation method not described’; Unclear risk of bias | |
| Use different cut-off for difference in the rate missing data between different arms/comparisons | 13 (6) |
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*Number of RCTs disagreeing for this reason; percentage over the total of disagreements for different interpretation.
†When two extracts are reported, they refer to the same study.
RCT, randomised controlled trial.