Odds ratios of treatment response were well approximated from continuous rating scale scores for meta-analysis

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Odds ratios of treatment response were well approximated from continuous rating scale scores for meta-analysis. / Meister, Ramona; von Wolff, Alessa; Kriston, Levente.

In: J CLIN EPIDEMIOL, Vol. 68, No. 7, 18.02.2015, p. 740-51.

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@article{381e8e8193b04c239e46fa92e11bb486,
title = "Odds ratios of treatment response were well approximated from continuous rating scale scores for meta-analysis",
abstract = "OBJECTIVES: To empirically evaluate the performance of methods for estimating odds ratios and their corresponding standard errors from continuous end point data for meta-analysis.STUDY DESIGN AND SETTING: A database of randomized controlled trials of chronic depression treatments was used. Trials that reported both continuous and dichotomous end points for symptom improvement were considered. Odds ratios and standard errors were calculated from the dichotomous data and estimated from the continuous data using currently available methods: Hasselblad and Hedges (HH), Cox and Snell (CS), Furukawa (F), Suissa (S), and Kraemer and Kupfer (KK). Single and meta-analytically pooled observed and estimated values were compared.RESULTS: A total of 26 trials were included. At the trial level, four of five (HH, CS, F, and S) and three of four (HH, F, and S) methods for estimating odds ratios and standard errors performed well, respectively. We found considerable differences in the performance of all methods across trials with more accurate estimates for smaller treatment effects. At the level of meta-analysis, three of four methods (CS, F, and S) performed acceptably.CONCLUSION: Odds ratios and standard errors can be approximated from continuous end points, but we recommend sensitivity and subgroup analyses to test robustness of the findings.",
author = "Ramona Meister and {von Wolff}, Alessa and Levente Kriston",
note = "Copyright {\textcopyright} 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.",
year = "2015",
month = feb,
day = "18",
doi = "10.1016/j.jclinepi.2015.02.006",
language = "English",
volume = "68",
pages = "740--51",
journal = "J CLIN EPIDEMIOL",
issn = "0895-4356",
publisher = "Elsevier USA",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Odds ratios of treatment response were well approximated from continuous rating scale scores for meta-analysis

AU - Meister, Ramona

AU - von Wolff, Alessa

AU - Kriston, Levente

N1 - Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

PY - 2015/2/18

Y1 - 2015/2/18

N2 - OBJECTIVES: To empirically evaluate the performance of methods for estimating odds ratios and their corresponding standard errors from continuous end point data for meta-analysis.STUDY DESIGN AND SETTING: A database of randomized controlled trials of chronic depression treatments was used. Trials that reported both continuous and dichotomous end points for symptom improvement were considered. Odds ratios and standard errors were calculated from the dichotomous data and estimated from the continuous data using currently available methods: Hasselblad and Hedges (HH), Cox and Snell (CS), Furukawa (F), Suissa (S), and Kraemer and Kupfer (KK). Single and meta-analytically pooled observed and estimated values were compared.RESULTS: A total of 26 trials were included. At the trial level, four of five (HH, CS, F, and S) and three of four (HH, F, and S) methods for estimating odds ratios and standard errors performed well, respectively. We found considerable differences in the performance of all methods across trials with more accurate estimates for smaller treatment effects. At the level of meta-analysis, three of four methods (CS, F, and S) performed acceptably.CONCLUSION: Odds ratios and standard errors can be approximated from continuous end points, but we recommend sensitivity and subgroup analyses to test robustness of the findings.

AB - OBJECTIVES: To empirically evaluate the performance of methods for estimating odds ratios and their corresponding standard errors from continuous end point data for meta-analysis.STUDY DESIGN AND SETTING: A database of randomized controlled trials of chronic depression treatments was used. Trials that reported both continuous and dichotomous end points for symptom improvement were considered. Odds ratios and standard errors were calculated from the dichotomous data and estimated from the continuous data using currently available methods: Hasselblad and Hedges (HH), Cox and Snell (CS), Furukawa (F), Suissa (S), and Kraemer and Kupfer (KK). Single and meta-analytically pooled observed and estimated values were compared.RESULTS: A total of 26 trials were included. At the trial level, four of five (HH, CS, F, and S) and three of four (HH, F, and S) methods for estimating odds ratios and standard errors performed well, respectively. We found considerable differences in the performance of all methods across trials with more accurate estimates for smaller treatment effects. At the level of meta-analysis, three of four methods (CS, F, and S) performed acceptably.CONCLUSION: Odds ratios and standard errors can be approximated from continuous end points, but we recommend sensitivity and subgroup analyses to test robustness of the findings.

U2 - 10.1016/j.jclinepi.2015.02.006

DO - 10.1016/j.jclinepi.2015.02.006

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 25801601

VL - 68

SP - 740

EP - 751

JO - J CLIN EPIDEMIOL

JF - J CLIN EPIDEMIOL

SN - 0895-4356

IS - 7

ER -