| Literature DB >> 34126999 |
Chang Xu1, Xiaoqin Zhou2, Liliane Zorzela3, Ke Ju4, Luis Furuya-Kanamori5, Lifeng Lin6, Cuncun Lu7,8, Omran A H Musa9, Sunita Vohra3,10.
Abstract
BACKGROUNDS: Zero-events studies frequently occur in systematic reviews of adverse events, which consist of an important source of evidence. We aimed to examine how evidence of zero-events studies was utilized in the meta-analyses of systematic reviews of adverse events.Entities:
Keywords: Adverse events; Meta-analysis; Systematic review; Zero-events studies
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34126999 PMCID: PMC8204528 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-021-02008-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Fig. 1The literature screen process
Basic characteristics of included systematic reviews on adverse events
| Basic characteristics | No. of systematic reviews (N = 640) |
|---|---|
| 2008–2011 | 184 (28.75%) |
| 2015–2020 | 456 (71.25%) |
| Africa | 15 (2.34%) |
| America (North and South) | 193 (30.16%) |
| Asia | 193 (30.16%) |
| European | 219 (34.22%) |
| Oceania | 20 (3.13%) |
| Drug | 483 (75.47%) |
| Surgery or device | 108 (16.88%) |
| Others (e.g., complementary medicine) | 49 (7.66%) |
| Pairwise meta-analysis | 585 (91.41%) |
| Network meta-analysis | 17 (2.66%) |
| Both pairwise and network meta-analyses | 32 (5.0%) |
| Association | 2 (0.31%) |
| Individual participant data | 4 (0.63%) |
| Yes | 166 (25.94%) |
| No | 474 (74.06%) |
| Randomized controlled trial (RCT) | 460 (71.88%) |
| Non-randomized study of intervention (NRSI) | 89 (13.91%) |
| Both RCT and NRSI | 87 (13.59%) |
| Not reported | 4 (0.63%) |
| Odds ratio, including Peto’s OR | 266 (41.56%) |
| Risk ratio or relative risk | 316 (49.38%) |
| Hazard ratio | 9 (1.41%) |
| Risk difference | 15 (2.34%) |
| Others (e.g., mixed use, Chi2, coef.) | 34 (5.31%) |
| Yes | 406 (63.45%) |
| No | 88 (13.75%) |
| No data available for judgment | 146 (22.80%) |
| Yes | 16 (2.50%) |
| No | 624 (97.5%) |
Methodological information for dealing with zero-events studies
| Methodological information for dealing with zero-events studies | Yes (%, exact CI) | No (%, exact CI) | NC or NA (%, exact CI) | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1) In the systematic review, did any meta-analysis contain zero-events studies? | 406 (63.44, 59.57 to 67.18) | 88 (13.75, 11.18 to 16.66) | 146 (22.81, 19.62 to 26.26) | 640 |
| 2) If zero-events studies were involved, what were the types of zero-events studies? | 406 | |||
| • Single-arm-zero-events only | 174 (42.86, 37.99 to 47.83) | ‐ | ‐ | |
| • Double-arm-zero-events only | 7 (1.72, 0.70 to 3.52) | ‐ | ‐ | |
| • Both single and double | 208 (51.23, 46.25 to 56.19) | ‐ | ‐ | |
| • At least containing single-arm-zero-events study | 7 (1.72, 0.70 to 3.52) | ‐ | ‐ | |
| • At least containing double-arm-zero-events study | 8 (1.97, 0.85 to 3.85) | ‐ | ‐ | |
| • Cannot be judged | 2 (0.49, 0.06 to 1.77) | ‐ | ‐ | |
| 3) If zero-events studies were involved, whether the authors specified methods to deal with zero-events studies? | 131 (32.27, 27.74 to 37.05) | 275 (67.73, 62.95 to 72.26) | 0 (0.00, 0.00 to 0.90) | 406 |
| 4) If the authors specified methods, whether they clarified reasons for selecting the method for zero-events studies? | 44 (33.59, 25.58 to 42.36) | 87 (66.41, 57.64 to 74.42) | 0 (0.00, 0.00 to 2.78) | 131 |
| 5) If zero-events studies were involved, how zero-events studies were dealt with by the authors? | See detailed methods in Fig. | |||
| • Discarding single-arm-zero-events studies (174 + 208 + 7 = 389) | 3 (0.77, 0.16 to 2.24) | 384 (98.71, 97.03 to 99.58) | 2 (0.51, 0.06 to 1.85) | 389 |
| • Discarding double-arm-zero-events studies (7 + 208 + 8 = 223) | 170 (76.23, 70.09 to 81.66) | 50 (22.42, 17.12 to 28.47) | 3 (1.35, 0.28 to 3.85) | 223 |
| 6) Whether a sensitivity analysis was employed through at least one different synthesis method for dealing with zero-events studies? | 53 (13.05, 9.93 to 16.73) | 353 (86.95, 83.27 to 90.07) | 0 (0.00, 0.00 to 0.90) | 406 |
| 7) For those failed to synthesize studies with zero-events, did the authors discuss about the potential impact of such studies (e.g., discarding them) on the results? | 22 (12.94, 8.29 to 18.94) | 148 (87.06, 81.06 to 91.71) | 0 (0.00, 0.00 to 2.15) | 170 |
NC not clear; NA not applicable
Fig. 2Methods for dealing with zero-events studies in eligible systematic reviews