| Literature DB >> 35167030 |
Rodrigo R N Rizzo1,2, Aidan G Cashin2,3, Matthew K Bagg2,3,4, Sylvia M Gustin2,5, Hopin Lee6,7, James H McAuley1,2.
Abstract
Mediation analysis is a common statistical method used to investigate mechanisms of health exposure and interventions. The reporting quality of mediation studies used in randomised controlled trials has been considered heterogeneous and incomplete. The reporting quality of mediation analysis in observational studies is unknown. We conducted a systematic review to describe the reporting standards of recently published observational studies that used mediation analysis to understand the mechanism of health exposures. We searched for studies published between June 2017 and June 2019 indexed in EMBASE, MEDLINE and PsycINFO. Two reviewers screened articles and selected a random sample of 50 eligible studies for inclusion. We included studies across 13 healthcare fields and ten different health conditions. Most studies (74%) collected data on healthy individuals to assess their risk of developing a health disorder. Psychosocial and behavioural factors (self-control, self-esteem, alcohol consumption, pain) were the most prevalent exposures (n = 30, 60%), outcomes (n = 23, 46%) and mediators (n = 29, 58%). Most studies used a cross-sectional design (64%, n = 32), and a few studies reported sample size calculations (4%, n = 8). In 20% (n = 10) of the studies, adjustment for confounders was reported. Only 10% (n = 5) of studies reported the assumptions underlying the mediation analysis, and 14% (n = 7) of studies conducted some sensitivity analysis to assess the degree which unmeasured confounders would affect the estimate of the mediation effect. Mediation analysis is a common method used to investigate mechanisms in prevention research. The reporting of mediation analysis in observational studies is incomplete and may impact reproducibility, evidence synthesis and implementation.Entities:
Keywords: Mechanism; Mediation analysis; Observational studies; Prevention; Publication; Reporting; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35167030 PMCID: PMC9343342 DOI: 10.1007/s11121-022-01349-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prev Sci ISSN: 1389-4986
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram describing record screening and inclusion
General characteristics of the included studies
| Characteristics ( | |
|---|---|
| Primary study | 18 (36) |
| Secondary analysis of a previous study or existing database | 32 (64) |
| Cross-sectional | 32 (64) |
| Longitudinal retrospective | 4 (8) |
| Cohort | 14 (28) |
| Traditional | 45 (90) |
| Causal mediation analysis (using counterfactual approach) | 5 (10) |
| 456 (214–1264) | |
| Mental Health | 19 (38) |
| Substance abuse | 6 (12) |
| Behavioural medicine | 5 (10) |
| Aging | 4 (8) |
| Diabetes and obesity | 3 (6) |
| Public health | 3 (6) |
| Cardiology | 2 (4) |
| Occupational health | 2 (4) |
| Other | 6 (12) |
| Healthy participants | 37 (74) |
| Mental disorders | 3 (6) |
| Neurological disorders | 2 (4) |
| Pain | 2 (4) |
| Substance abuser | 2 (4) |
| Other | 4 (8) |
| Single exposure | 36 (72) |
| Multiple exposures | 14 (28) |
| Psychosocial and behaviourala | 30 (60) |
| Symptom of a mental healthb | 9 (18) |
| Demographic | 5 (10) |
| Biological | 4 (8) |
| Physical function | 2 (4) |
| Single outcome | 35 (70) |
| Multiple outcomes | 15 (30) |
| Psychosocial and behaviourala | 23 (46) |
| Symptom of a mental healthb | 16 (32) |
| Biological | 7 (14) |
| Physical function | 2 (4) |
| Cognition | 2 (4) |
| Single mediator | 23 (46) |
| Multiple mediators | 27 (54) |
| two mediators | 14 (28) |
| three mediators | 8 (16) |
| four mediators | 2 (4) |
| five mediators | 2 (4) |
| more than five mediators | 1 (2) |
| Psychosocial and behavioural a | 29 (58) |
| Symptom of a mental health b | 12 (24) |
| Biological | 5 (10) |
| Cognition | 3 (6) |
| Physical function | 1 (2) |
| Measured with the exposure and outcome | 32 (64) |
| Measured after the exposure and before the outcome | 12 (24) |
| Measured with the exposure | 3 (6) |
| Measured with outcome | 3 (6) |
aPsychosocial and behavioural includes self-esteem, alcohol consumption, decision making, social connection, pain
bSymptom of a mental health includes stress, suicide, depression, anxiety
cCausal mediation analysis refers to reporting of the following terms in the study: causal mediation analysis or counterfactual framework
Standard of reporting in the title, abstract introduction and methods of observational studies that used mediation analysis
| Section/topic | Characteristic | |
|---|---|---|
| Did the articles report the mechanistic nature of the study? (Use of the following terms causality, mechanisms evaluation, indirect effect, and mediation analysis) | ||
| Title and abstract | 24 (48) | |
| Abstract (only) | 23 (46) | |
| Title (only) | 1 (2) | |
| Not mentioned | 2 (4) | |
| Did the articles report the …? | ||
| -Motivation for using mediation | Yes | 49 (98) |
| -Rationale for studying mechanisms | Yes | 49 (98) |
| -Intention of the study | Confirmatory | 39 (78) |
| Exploratory | 6 (12) | |
| Unclear | 5 (10) | |
| Did the articles describe the …? | ||
| -Hypothesis for mediation | Yes | 33 (66) |
| -Rationale for the exposure-outcome relationship | Yes | 46 (92) |
| -Rationale for the exposure-mediator relationship | Yes | 46 (92) |
| -Rationale for the mediator-outcome relationship | Yes | 48 (96) |
| Did the articles report the …? | ||
| -Protocol or registration | Yes | 1 (2) |
| -Study design | Yes | 11 (22) |
| -Main effect of the mediation study | Yes | 33 (66) |
| -Graphical representation | Yes | 38 (76) |
| Did the articles consider possible confounders in the mediation model? | Exposure-mediator or exposure outcome | 21 (42) |
| Mediator-outcome | 14 (28) | |
| No confounders specified | 10 (20) | |
| Unclear | 19 (38) | |
| Did the articles report the method to adjust for measured confounders? | Yes | 13 (26) |
| Did the articles consider exposure-mediator interaction? | Yes | 7 (14) |
| Did the articles explain how exposure-mediator interaction was modelled? | Yes | 5 (10) |
| If relevant, did the articles specify the multilevel nature of the exposure, mediator, or outcome? | Yes | 1 (2) |
| Did the articles specify the assumptions required for making causal inference? | No confounding (exposure-mediator) | 5 (10) |
| No confounding (exposure-outcome) | 4 (8) | |
| No confounding (mediator-outcome) | 4 (8) | |
| No exposure-dependent confounding (mediator-outcome) | ||
| No interactions | 3 (6) | |
| Consistency | 0 (0) | |
| Positivity | 0 (0) | |
| No confounding (exposure-mediator) | 0 (0) | |
| Did the articles state | Yes | 48 (96) |
| No | 1 (2) | |
| Partial (one or more missing) | 1 (2) | |
| Did the articles state | Yes | 42 (84) |
| No | 6 (12) | |
| Partial (one or more missing) | 2 (4) | |
| Did the articles state how sample size was estimated for the mediation model? | Yes | 4 (8) |
| Did the articles specify the statistical method to assess mediation?a | Yes | 32 (64) |
| Unclear (missing details to differentiate to other statistical methods) | 4 (8) | |
| Did the articles specify the statistical model to assess mediation?b | Yes | 19 (38) |
| Unclear (missing details to differentiate to other statistical models) | 9 (18) | |
| Did the articles mention the presence or absence of missing data? | Yes | 25 (50) |
| Did the articles mention | Yes | 25 (50) |
| Did the articles describe any approach to sensitivity analysis? | Yes | 7 (14) |
| Unclear (not clear if the intention of approach was related to do a sensitivity analysis) | 3 (6) | |
| Did the articles provide references to statistical software or packages used in the mediation analysis? | Yes | 38 (76) |
aStatistical method is defined as the statistical test used to assess mediation with references (e.g. the difference method, the product method, Baron and Kenny method, causal mediation)
bStatistical model is defined as the process of applying statistical analysis in the dataset (e.g. linear regression, logistic regression, Cox proportional hazards). The term “regression” only was checked as unclear
Standard of reporting in the results section of observational studies that used mediation analysis
| Section/topic | Characteristic | |
|---|---|---|
| Did the articles provide estimates for the …? | ||
| Total effect | Effect | 46 (92) |
| Precision | 30 (60) | |
| p value | 38 (76) | |
| Direct effect | Effect | 36 (72) |
| Precision | 27 (54) | |
| p value | 29 (58) | |
| Indirect effect | Effect | 46 (92) |
| Precision | 37 (74) | |
| p value | 37 (74) | |
| Exposure-mediator effect | Effect | 44 (88) |
| Precision | 24 (48) | |
| p value | 37 (74) | |
| Mediator-outcome effect | Effect | 24 (48) |
| Precision | 25 (50) | |
| p value | 25 (50) | |
| Proportion mediated | Effect | 18 (36) |
| Precision | 2 (4) | |
| p value | 3 (6) | |
| Sensitivity analysis | Effect | 7 (14) |
| Precision | 7 (14) | |
| p value | 2 (6) | |
Total effect: the effect of the exposure on the outcome that encompasses all indirect and direct effects. Direct effect: the effect of the exposure on the outcome that is not explained by the mediator(s). Indirect effect: the effect of the exposure on the outcome that works through hypothesised mediator(s). Precision refers to the 95% confidence interval (95% CI)