| Literature DB >> 30953448 |
Andrija Babic1, Ruzica Tokalic2, João Amílcar Silva Cunha3, Ivana Novak2, Jelena Suto2, Marin Vidak2, Ivana Miosic2, Ivana Vuka2, Tina Poklepovic Pericic2, Livia Puljak4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: An important part of the systematic review methodology is appraisal of the risk of bias in included studies. Cochrane systematic reviews are considered golden standard regarding systematic review methodology, but Cochrane's instructions for assessing risk of attrition bias are vague, which may lead to inconsistencies in authors' assessments. The aim of this study was to analyze consistency of judgments and support for judgments of attrition bias in Cochrane reviews of interventions published in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (CDSR).Entities:
Keywords: Attrition bias; Cochrane; Incomplete data; Inconsistency; Missing data; Systematic review
Year: 2019 PMID: 30953448 PMCID: PMC6451283 DOI: 10.1186/s12874-019-0717-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
Examples of unclear supporting explanations
| Study number | Unclear supporting explanation | Judgment |
|---|---|---|
| 2 | All participants were accounted for | Low |
| 12 | Outcomes reported for all women randomized | Low |
| 20 | Primary outcomes were reported | Low |
| 26 | None found | Low |
| 54 | Analysed the same number of participants in both groups | Low |
| 66 | Expected outcomes reported. Response rates reduced in patients over 4 surveys | Low |
| 80 | No study protocol was available | Low |
| 82 | It appears that all participants completed the study and contributed data for each outcome at all relevant time points | Low |
| 2 | Unclear | Unclear |
| 4 | Losses to follow-up were unclear | Unclear |
| 6 | It was unclear whether or not there was attrition, or loss to follow-up at final follow-up based on the results section | Unclear |
| 29 | No information | Unclear |
| 31 | Insufficient information to permit judgment of low risk or high risk | Unclear |
| 32 | May be participants randomized who did not complete | Unclear |
| 41 | Few data available in conference abstract only | Unclear |
| 66 | Unknown | Unclear |
| 442 | High attrition (41%) | Unclear |
| 13 | Number of drop-outs reported, but no details | High |
| 25 | Not all raw data were provided | High |
| 52 | Not clear how many withdrew | High |
Number of explanations in a category for percent of attrition per group
| Category for percent of attrition per group | N (%) |
|---|---|
| Unclear | 3272 (31.8) |
| Total attrition only mentioned; attrition per group not reported | 1593 (15.5) |
| No attrition | 1544 (15) |
| Only number of patients, no percent provided | 1115 (10.8) |
| Not reported | 901 (8.8) |
| No explanation for this category | 414 (4) |
| 10–20% | 359 (3.5) |
| Above 30% | 276 (2.7) |
| Under 10% | 267 (2.6) |
| 20–30% | 216 (2.1) |
| Total attrition reported as percent; attrition per group reported as absolute numbers so it was not possible to judge percent attrition per group | 248 (2.4) |
| Information about attrition provided for one group only | 35 (0.3) |
| ‘Support for judgment’ box was blank: no explanation provided for the judgment | 27 (0.3) |
| Above certain percentage that is not precisely defined | 13 (0.1) |
| Under certain percentage that is not 10% | 6 (0.06) |
| There was no supporting explanation because RoB table did not have a domain for attrition bias at all | 6 (0.06) |
| Total | 10,292 (100) |
Frequency of different judgments for the same supporting explanation related to percent of attrition in RCT groups and comments about statistics
| Supporting explanation | Risk of bias judgment | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Low, N (%) | Unclear, N (%) | High, N (%) | |
|
| |||
| Attrition between the groups was under 10%, | 101 (82.8) | 16 (13.1) | 5 (4.1) |
| Attrition between the groups that was 10–20%, | 91 (63.6) | 28 (19.6) | 24 (16.8) |
| Attrition between the groups that was 21–30%, | 34 (56.7) | 5 (8.3) | 21 (35) |
| Attrition between the groups that was above 30%, | 18 (25.7) | 9 (12.9) | 43 (61.4) |
|
| |||
| ITT analysis used, | 140 (72.5) | 21 (10.9) | 32 (16.6) |
| ITT analysis was not used, | 20 (57.1) | 9 (25.7) | 6 (17.1) |
| PP analysis used, | 7 (87.5) | 1 (12.5) | 0 (0) |
| LOCF analysis used, | 13 (52) | 3 (12) | 9 (36) |
Abbreviations: ITT intention-to-treat, LOCF last observation carried forward, PP per protocol, RCT randomized controlled trial,
Number of supporting explanations in a category for reporting reasons for attrition
| Category: reporting of reasons for attrition | N (%) |
|---|---|
| Reasons reported | 1697 (16.5) |
| Reasons not reported | 370 (3.6) |
| Inadequately reported | 90 (0.9) |
| Total | 2157 (21) |
Supporting explanations about statistics used that was related to attrition bias
| Statistical information | N (%) |
|---|---|
| ITT | 826 (8) |
| No ITT | 238 (2.3) |
| PP | 88 (0.9) |
| ITT, LOCF | 87 (0.8) |
| LOCF | 67 (0.7) |
| ITT not reported | 47 (0.5) |
| ITT, PP | 34 (0.3) |
| Completer analysis | 27 (0.2) |
| mITT | 25 (0.2) |
| Sensitivity analysis | 15 (0.1) |
| BOCF | 12 (0.1) |
| ITT, BOCF | 8 (0.08) |
| Analysis not described | 6 (0.06) |
| Available case analysis | 5 (0.05) |
| ITT, Completer analysis | 5 (0.05) |
| LOCF, BOCF | 5 (0.05) |
| ITT analysis may have been of value | 4 (0.04) |
| ITT, PP, LOCF | 4 (0.04) |
| ITT, LOCF, WOCF | 4 (0.04) |
| LOCF, PP | 4 (0.04) |
| Partial ITT | 4 (0.04) |
| WOCF | 3 (0.03) |
| Unclear whether LOCF was used | 3 (0.03) |
| ITT inadequate | 3 (0.03) |
| Some participants were excluded from analysis | 3 (0.03) |
| No ITT, PP | 3 (0.03) |
| BOCF, WOCF | 2 (0.02) |
| ITT, LOCF, NRI | 2 (0.02) |
| No LOCF | 2 (0.02) |
| We have not been able to re-analyse the outcomes for all of the enrolled infants (ITT) | 1 (0.01) |
| LOCF, Sensitivity analysis | 1 (0.01) |
| ITT, PP, LOCF, Sensitivity analysis | 1 (0.01) |
| The trial states that the analysis was performed on an ITT basis, but the data seems to have been analysed on-treatment | 1 (0.01) |
| ITT analysis possible | 1 (0.01) |
| ITT analysis conducted but unclear how missing data were dealt with | 1 (0.01) |
| PP, FAS | 1 (0.01) |
| It is likely that the principle of ITT analysis was violated | 1 (0.01) |
| Statistical analysis used the APT | 1 (0.01) |
| Missing outcome data imputed in analysis | 1 (0.01) |
| True ITT analysis was difficult | 1 (0.01) |
| Missing participants were omitted from the analysis | 1 (0.01) |
| Although the study was set up to be analysed on ITT basis, the participants with missing outcomes were not included in the primary analysis | 1 (0.01) |
| ITT done only for | 1 (0.01) |
| Not strict ITT analysis | 1 (0.01) |
| mITT, but unclear how missing data were dealt with | 1 (0.01) |
| ITT, WOCF | 1 (0.01) |
| mITT, LOCF | 1 (0.01) |
| mITT, PP | 1 (0.01) |
| Equal distribution among groups, ITT analysis not necessary | 1 (0.01) |
| It was unclear if data analysis was PP or ITT | 1 (0.01) |
| The results are presented as available case analysis rather than ITT. The authors present a sensitivity analysis | 1 (0.01) |
| No information about whether an ITT analysis was undertaken and, if so, how missing data were imputed | 1 (0.01) |
| This is an “as treated” as opposed to an ITT analysis | 1 (0.01) |
| LOCF, BOCF, SOCF | 1 (0.01) |
| ITT, PP, mITT | 1 (0.01) |
| ITT, No sensitivity analysis | 1 (0.01) |
| LOCF, Completer analysis | 1 (0.01) |
| Large number of cross-overs made ITT impossible after the first phase | 1 (0.01) |
| Unclear if ITT | 1 (0.01) |
| ITT, PP, Sensitivity analysis | 1 (0.01) |
| No ITT, Completer analysis | 1 (0.01) |
| No mention of how missing data from participants who dropped out were dealt with, e.g. ITT analysis | 1 (0.01) |
| ITT, Sensitivity analysis | 1 (0.01) |
| No sensitivity analysis | 1 (0.01) |
| LOCF, WOCF | 1 (0.01) |
Abbreviations: ITT intention-to-treat analysis, PP per protocol analysis, LOCF last observation carried forward, mITT modified intention-to-treat analysis, BOCF baseline observation carried forward, WOCF worst observation carried forward, NRI non-responder imputation, FAS full analysis set, APT all patients treated, SOCF screening observation carried forward
Description of domains in Cochrane reviews that had multiple separate domains for assessing attrition bias for different outcomes
| Study number | Names of separate domains for attrition bias in the Risk of Bias table |
|---|---|
| 158, 197 | Short-term, long-term |
| 240 | End-of-intervention, end of follow-up |
| 250, 459, 533 | Subjective outcome measures, objective outcome measures |
| 285 | Clinical heart failure, subclinical heart failure (dichotomous and/or continuous), overall survival, tumor response, quality of life, adverse effects, adverse effects other than cardiac damage |
| 302 | Drop-out rate described and acceptable, participants analyzed in the group to which they were allocated |
| 312 | Mortality (all cause), hospital readmissions (all cause), hospital readmissions (due to adverse drug events), hospital emergency department contacts (all-cause), hospital emergency department contacts (due to adverse drug events), adverse drug events |
| 316 | Adverse events: hypothyroidism, development or worsening of Graves’ ophthalmopathy, health-related quality of life, participants in euthyroid state, recurrence of hyperthyroidism, socioeconomic effects |
| 324 | 12 weeks or less, after 12 weeks |
| 340 | Primary outcomes, secondary outcomes |
| 346 | All outcomes: drop-outs, all outcomes: ITT analysis |
| 394 | Time to resolution of diabetic ketoacidosis, all-cause mortality, hypoglycemic episodes, morbidity, socioeconomic effects |
| 427 | Drop-outs reported, ITT analysis reported |
| 499 | Objective outcome (deaths), subjective outcome (quality of life) |
| 638, 795 | Drop-outs, ITT analysis |
| 641 | Pain, function |
| 722 | Short term follow-up (up to 3 months), longer term follow-up |
| 761 | Consumption outcome, selection outcome |
| 805 | Hemodynamic data, clinical outcomes |
| 867 | Survival, tumor response, toxicity, quality of life |
| 943 | Short-term outcomes, childhood outcomes |
| 946 | All outcomes, ITT analysis |
| 949 | Wound healed, wound area, time to healing |
| 951 | Pain, swelling, function, adverse effects |
Examples of curious supporting explanations for attrition bias judgments that may not appear to be suitable for judging this risk of bias domain
| Study number | Support for judgment | Judgment for risk of attrition bias |
|---|---|---|
| 82 | Chinese article - unable to ascertain | Unclear |
| 144 | This study was a feasibility study. Only 1 woman received the intervention. This study contributed no data to the review. | Unclear |
| 255 | No pre-published protocol identified | High or unclear |
| 256 | If we assume a person works for 40 h per week, then for 28 participants the working hours will be 8960 h for 8 weeks (4 weeks intervention and 4 weeks control period). However the study reported only 7729 working hours based on accelerometer data | High |
| 376 | This is not clear from the paper. Author contacted, but when he moved jobs, the data files for this study were deleted | Unclear |
| 490 | 137 minus 28 equals 109, not 108 | Unclear |
| 492 | Exact time periods of ‘before and after’ accident data were unclear. Authors reported that they “should be 3 to 5 years”. | Unclear |
| 494 | 1 - A reasonable account of how attrition was dealt with is given, but no specific reference to CONSORT | Low |
| 517 | Documented evidence that the CONSORT guidelines have been followed | Low |
| 606 | Data sparse largely narrative style | Unclear |
| 699 | Numbers do not always add up - query if N for outcomes are based on those who answered specific questions on follow-up? | High |
| 727 | Data of drop-outs was censored. | Low |
| 730 | Eleven patients were withdrawn before random assignment: 1 declined further participation, 8 were withdrawn by their physician, and 2 did not meet the entry criteria | Low |
| 744 | Publication is in German and our translation is incomplete. | Unclear |
| 835 | Differences in baseline characteristics of questionnaire responders vs non-responders (western ethnicity in 81% vs 54%, mean age 31 vs 28 years, median blood loss 1500 vs 1150 mL). Big difference in compliance to allocated treatment: 8 vs 34. The design of this trial carries a high risk for selecting the study population | High |
| 838 | Primary and secondary endpoints not specified directly but do address aims | Low |
| 849 | “The situations to consider eliminating the subject from data analysis did not arise” | Low |
| 850 | No Table | High |
| 854 | Duration of study not defined | High |
| 854 | Criteria for kidney disease not defined | Unclear |
| 873 | Denominators inconsistent in study | Unclear |
Examples of vague instructions for Cochrane authors regarding judgments of attrition bias
| Quote from a Cochrane review | Comment of authors of this study |
|---|---|
| Missing outcome data balanced in numbers across intervention groups, with similar reasons for missing data across groups | There is no quantitative measure of “balanced” |
| For dichotomous outcome data, the proportion of missing outcomes compared with observed event risk not enough to have a clinically relevant impact on the intervention effect estimate | There is no quantitative measure of “not enough” |
| Missing data have been imputed using appropriate methods | Not specified what is considered by Cochrane to be “appropriate methods” |
| Reason for missing outcome data likely to be related to true outcome, with either imbalance in numbers or reasons for missing data across intervention groups | There is no quantitative measure of “imbalance” |
| Potentially inappropriate application of simple imputation. | Not specified what is considered to be “inappropriate application” |