Literature DB >> 8030632

Invited commentary: a critical look at some popular meta-analytic methods.

S Greenland1.   

Abstract

Meta-analysis is essential for obtaining reproducible summaries of study results and valuable for discovering patterns among study results. A good meta-analysis will highlight and delineate the subjective components of these processes and vigorously search for sources of heterogeneity. Unfortunately, these objective are not always met by common techniques. For example, a scatterplot is an objective summarization if the data are uncensored, but inferred patterns should be regarded as subjective recognitions of the analyst, not objective data properties. Random-effects summaries encourage averaging over important data patterns, divert attention from key sources of heterogeneity, and can amplify distortions produced by publication bias; such summaries should only be used when important heterogeneity remains after a thorough search for the sources of such heterogeneity. Quality scoring adds the analyst's subjective bias to the results, wastes information, and can prevent the recognition of key sources of heterogeneity; it should be completely replaced by meta-regression on quality items (the score components).

Mesh:

Year:  1994        PMID: 8030632     DOI: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a117248

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Epidemiol        ISSN: 0002-9262            Impact factor:   4.897


  96 in total

1.  Occupational exposure to diesel exhaust and lung cancer: a meta-analysis.

Authors:  M Lipsett; S Campleman
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  1999-07       Impact factor: 9.308

Review 2.  Occupational risk factors for shoulder pain: a systematic review.

Authors:  D A van der Windt; E Thomas; D P Pope; A F de Winter; G J Macfarlane; L M Bouter; A J Silman
Journal:  Occup Environ Med       Date:  2000-07       Impact factor: 4.402

3.  Participation of epidemiologists and/or biostatisticians and methodological quality of published controlled clinical trials.

Authors:  M Delgado-Rodriguez; M Ruiz-Canela; J De Irala-Estevez; J Llorca; A Martinez-Gonzalez
Journal:  J Epidemiol Community Health       Date:  2001-08       Impact factor: 3.710

4.  Systematic reviews of diagnostic research. Considerations about assessment and incorporation of methodological quality.

Authors:  H C de Vet; T van der Weijden; J W Muris; J Heyrman; F Buntinx; J A Knottnerus
Journal:  Eur J Epidemiol       Date:  2001       Impact factor: 8.082

Review 5.  Association between chronic periodontal disease and obesity: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

Authors:  Benjamin W Chaffee; Scott J Weston
Journal:  J Periodontol       Date:  2010-08-19       Impact factor: 6.993

Review 6.  Causality in cancer epidemiology.

Authors:  Pagona Lagiou; Hans-Olov Adami; Dimitrios Trichopoulos
Journal:  Eur J Epidemiol       Date:  2005       Impact factor: 8.082

7.  Assessment of methodological quality of primary studies by systematic reviews: results of the metaquality cross sectional study.

Authors:  Lorenzo P Moja; Elena Telaro; Roberto D'Amico; Ivan Moschetti; Laura Coe; Alessandro Liberati
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2005-04-07

8.  Do nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs affect the risk of developing ovarian cancer? A meta-analysis.

Authors:  Stefanos Bonovas; Kalitsa Filioussi; Nikolaos M Sitaras
Journal:  Br J Clin Pharmacol       Date:  2005-08       Impact factor: 4.335

9.  The coordinate-based meta-analysis of neuroimaging data.

Authors:  Pantelis Samartsidis; Silvia Montagna; Thomas E Nichols; Timothy D Johnson
Journal:  Stat Sci       Date:  2017-11-28       Impact factor: 2.901

10.  Meta-analysis: four-drug, three-antibiotic, non-bismuth-containing "concomitant therapy" versus triple therapy for Helicobacter pylori eradication.

Authors:  Abdallah Said Essa; Jennifer Rosenthal Kramer; David Y Graham; Gerhard Treiber
Journal:  Helicobacter       Date:  2009-04       Impact factor: 5.753

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