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Landan Zhang; Sylwia Bujkiewicz; Dan Jackson – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
Simulated treatment comparison (STC) is an established method for performing population adjustment for the indirect comparison of two treatments, where individual patient data (IPD) are available for one trial but only aggregate level information is available for the other. The most commonly used method is what we call 'standard STC'. Here we fit…
Descriptors: Simulation, Patients, Outcomes of Treatment, Comparative Analysis
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Landan Zhang; Dan Jackson – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
A recent paper proposed an alternative weighting scheme when performing matching-adjusted indirect comparisons. This alternative approach follows the conventional one in matching the covariate means across two studies but differs in that it maximizes the effective sample size when doing so. The appendix of this paper showed, assuming there is one…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Medical Research, Sample Size, Research Methodology
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Kollin W. Rott; Gert Bronfort; Haitao Chu; Jared D. Huling; Brent Leininger; Mohammad Hassan Murad; Zhen Wang; James S. Hodges – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
Meta-analysis is commonly used to combine results from multiple clinical trials, but traditional meta-analysis methods do not refer explicitly to a population of individuals to whom the results apply and it is not clear how to use their results to assess a treatment's effect for a population of interest. We describe recently-introduced causally…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Causal Models, Outcomes of Treatment, Medical Research
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Danielle Pollock; Timothy Hugh Barker; Jennifer C. Stone; Edoardo Aromataris; Miloslav Klugar; Anna M. Scott; Cindy Stern; Amanda Ross-White; Ashley Whitehorn; Rick Wiechula; Larissa Shamseer; Zachary Munn – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
Predatory journals are a blemish on scholarly publishing and academia and the studies published within them are more likely to contain data that is false. The inclusion of studies from predatory journals in evidence syntheses is potentially problematic due to this propensity for false data to be included. To date, there has been little exploration…
Descriptors: Periodicals, Deception, Ethics, Medical Research
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Andres Jung; Tobias Braun; Susan Armijo-Olivo; Dimitris Challoumas; Kerstin Luedtke – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
External validity is an important parameter that needs to be considered for decision making in health research, but no widely accepted measurement tool for the assessment of external validity of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) exists. One of the most limiting factors for creating such a tool is probably the substantial heterogeneity and lack…
Descriptors: Randomized Controlled Trials, Validity, Delphi Technique, Definitions
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Suzanne C. Freeman; Alex J. Sutton; Nicola J. Cooper; Alessandro Gasparini; Michael J. Crowther; Neil Hawkins – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
Background: Traditionally, meta-analysis of time-to-event outcomes reports a single pooled hazard ratio assuming proportional hazards (PH). For health technology assessment evaluations, hazard ratios are frequently extrapolated across a lifetime horizon. However, when treatment effects vary over time, an assumption of PH is not always valid. The…
Descriptors: Cancer, Medical Research, Bayesian Statistics, Meta Analysis
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Laura Caquelin; Pauline Badra; Lucas Poulain; Bruno Laviolle; Moreno Ursino; Clara Locher – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
This study aimed to assess the feasibility of applying two recent phase I meta-analyses methods to protein kinase inhibitors (PKIs) developed in oncology and to identify situations where these methods could be both feasible and useful. This ancillary study used data from a systematic review conducted to identify dose-finding studies for PKIs. PKIs…
Descriptors: Oncology, Cancer, Medical Care Evaluation, Medical Research
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Kylie E. Hunter; Mason Aberoumand; Sol Libesman; James X. Sotiropoulos; Jonathan G. Williams; Wentao Li; Jannik Aagerup; Ben W. Mol; Rui Wang; Angie Barba; Nipun Shrestha; Angela C. Webster; Anna Lene Seidler – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
Increasing integrity concerns in medical research have prompted the development of tools to detect untrustworthy studies. Existing tools primarily assess published aggregate data (AD), though scrutiny of individual participant data (IPD) is often required to detect trustworthiness issues. Thus, we developed the IPD Integrity Tool for detecting…
Descriptors: Integrity, Randomized Controlled Trials, Data Use, Individual Characteristics
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Remiro-Azócar, Antonio; Heath, Anna; Baio, Gianluca – Research Synthesis Methods, 2023
We examine four important considerations in the development of covariate adjustment methodologies for indirect treatment comparisons. First, we consider potential advantages of weighting versus outcome modeling, placing focus on bias-robustness. Second, we outline why model-based extrapolation may be required and useful, in the specific context of…
Descriptors: Medical Research, Outcomes of Treatment, Comparative Analysis, Barriers
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Aidan C. Tan; Angela C. Webster; Sol Libesman; Zijing Yang; Rani R. Chand; Weber Liu; Talia Palacios; Kylie E. Hunter; Anna Lene Seidler – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
Background: Data sharing improves the value, synthesis, and integrity of research, but rates are low. Data sharing might be improved if data sharing policies were prominent and actionable at every stage of research. We aimed to systematically describe the epidemiology of data sharing policies across the health research lifecycle. Methods: This was…
Descriptors: Information Dissemination, Data, Health, Medical Research
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Simon Šuster; Timothy Baldwin; Karin Verspoor – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
Existing systems for automating the assessment of risk-of-bias (RoB) in medical studies are supervised approaches that require substantial training data to work well. However, recent revisions to RoB guidelines have resulted in a scarcity of available training data. In this study, we investigate the effectiveness of generative large language…
Descriptors: Medical Research, Safety, Experimental Groups, Control Groups
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Yoneoka, Daisuke; Omae, Katsuhiro; Henmi, Masayuki; Eguchi, Shinto – Research Synthesis Methods, 2023
The number of clinical prediction models sharing the same prediction task has increased in the medical literature. However, evidence synthesis methodologies that use the results of these prediction models have not been sufficiently studied, particularly in the context of meta-analysis settings where only summary statistics are available. In…
Descriptors: Prediction, Task Analysis, Medical Research, Outcomes of Treatment
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Cheng, David; Tchetgen, Eric Tchetgen; Signorovitch, James – Research Synthesis Methods, 2023
Matching-adjusted indirect comparison (MAIC) enables indirect comparisons of interventions across separate studies when individual patient-level data (IPD) are available for only one study. Due to its similarity with propensity score weighting, it has been speculated that MAIC can be combined with outcome regression models in the spirit of…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Robustness (Statistics), Intervention, Patients
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Cooper, Chris; Court, Rachel; Kotas, Eleanor; Schauberger, Ute – Research Synthesis Methods, 2021
Clinical trials registers form an important part of the search for studies in systematic reviews of intervention effectiveness but the search interfaces and functionality of registers can be challenging to search systematically and resource intensive to search well. We report a technical review of the search interfaces of three leading trials…
Descriptors: Databases, Medical Research, Search Engines, Computer Interfaces
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Michelle M. Haby; Jorge Otávio Maia Barreto; Jenny Yeon Hee Kim; Sasha Peiris; Cristián Mansilla; Marcela Torres; Diego Emmanuel Guerrero-Magaña; Ludovic Reveiz – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
Rapid review methodology aims to facilitate faster conduct of systematic reviews to meet the needs of the decision-maker, while also maintaining quality and credibility. This systematic review aimed to determine the impact of different methodological shortcuts for undertaking rapid reviews on the risk of bias (RoB) of the results of the review.…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Medical Research, Research Reports, Search Strategies
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