Systematic reviews do not adequately report or address missing outcome data in their analyses: a methodological survey
Author
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Kahale, Lara
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Diab, Batoul
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Brignardello Petersen, Romina
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Agarwal, Arnav
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Mustafa, Reem
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Kwong, Joey
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Neumann, Ignacio
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Li, Ling
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Cruz Lopes, Luciane
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Briel, Matthias
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Busse, Jason
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Lorio, Alfonso
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Vandvik, Per Olav
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Alexander, Paul
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Guyatt, Gordon H.
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Akl, Elie
Admission date
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2018-11-19T13:25:21Z
Available date
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2018-11-19T13:25:21Z
Publication date
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2018-03-02
Cita de ítem
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Journal of Clinical Epidemiology 99 (2018)14-23
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Identifier
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0895-4356
Identifier
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10.1016/j.jclinepi.2018.02.016
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/152678
Abstract
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Objectives: To describe how systematic review authors report and address categories of participants with potential missing outcome data of trial participants. Study Design and Setting: Methodological survey of systematic reviews reporting a group-level meta-analysis. Results: We included a random sample of 50 Cochrane and 50 non-Cochrane systematic reviews. Of these, 25 reported in their methods section a plan to consider at least one of the 10 categories of missing outcome data; 42 reported in their results, data for at least one category of missing data. The most reported category in the methods and results sections was ‘‘unexplained loss to follow-up’’ (n 5 34 in methods section and n 5 6 in the results section). Only 19 reported a method to handle missing data in their primary analyses, which was most often complete case analysis. Few reviews (n 5 9) reported in the methods section conducting sensitivity analysis to judge risk of bias associated with missing outcome data at the level of the meta-analysis; and only five of them presented the results of these analyses in the results section. Conclusion: Most systematic reviews do not explicitly report sufficient information on categories of trial participants with potential missing outcome data or address missing data in their primary analyses.
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Patrocinador
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Funding: The study was funded by Cochrane Methods Innovation Fund.