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Bias Due to Changes in Specified Outcomes during the Systematic Review Process

BACKGROUND: Adding, omitting or changing outcomes after a systematic review protocol is published can result in bias because it increases the potential for unacknowledged or post hoc revisions of the planned analyses. The main objective of this study was to look for discrepancies between primary out...

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Autores principales: Kirkham, Jamie J., Altman, Doug G., Williamson, Paula R.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2842442/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20339557
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0009810
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author Kirkham, Jamie J.
Altman, Doug G.
Williamson, Paula R.
author_facet Kirkham, Jamie J.
Altman, Doug G.
Williamson, Paula R.
author_sort Kirkham, Jamie J.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Adding, omitting or changing outcomes after a systematic review protocol is published can result in bias because it increases the potential for unacknowledged or post hoc revisions of the planned analyses. The main objective of this study was to look for discrepancies between primary outcomes listed in protocols and in the subsequent completed reviews published on the Cochrane Library. A secondary objective was to quantify the risk of bias in a set of meta-analyses where discrepancies between outcome specifications in protocols and reviews were found. METHODS AND FINDINGS: New reviews from three consecutive issues of the Cochrane Library were assessed. For each review, the primary outcome(s) listed in the review protocol and the review itself were identified and review authors were contacted to provide reasons for any discrepancies. Over a fifth (64/288, 22%) of protocol/review pairings were found to contain a discrepancy in at least one outcome measure, of which 48 (75%) were attributable to changes in the primary outcome measure. Where lead authors could recall a reason for the discrepancy in the primary outcome, there was found to be potential bias in nearly a third (8/28, 29%) of these reviews, with changes being made after knowledge of the results from individual trials. Only 4(6%) of the 64 reviews with an outcome discrepancy described the reason for the change in the review, with no acknowledgment of the change in any of the eight reviews containing potentially biased discrepancies. Outcomes that were promoted in the review were more likely to be significant than if there was no discrepancy (relative risk 1.66 95% CI (1.10, 2.49), p = 0.02). CONCLUSION: In a review, making changes after seeing the results for included studies can lead to biased and misleading interpretation if the importance of the outcome (primary or secondary) is changed on the basis of those results. Our assessment showed that reasons for discrepancies with the protocol are not reported in the review, demonstrating an under-recognition of the problem. Complete transparency in the reporting of changes in outcome specification is vital; systematic reviewers should ensure that any legitimate changes to outcome specification are reported with reason in the review.
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spelling pubmed-28424422010-03-26 Bias Due to Changes in Specified Outcomes during the Systematic Review Process Kirkham, Jamie J. Altman, Doug G. Williamson, Paula R. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Adding, omitting or changing outcomes after a systematic review protocol is published can result in bias because it increases the potential for unacknowledged or post hoc revisions of the planned analyses. The main objective of this study was to look for discrepancies between primary outcomes listed in protocols and in the subsequent completed reviews published on the Cochrane Library. A secondary objective was to quantify the risk of bias in a set of meta-analyses where discrepancies between outcome specifications in protocols and reviews were found. METHODS AND FINDINGS: New reviews from three consecutive issues of the Cochrane Library were assessed. For each review, the primary outcome(s) listed in the review protocol and the review itself were identified and review authors were contacted to provide reasons for any discrepancies. Over a fifth (64/288, 22%) of protocol/review pairings were found to contain a discrepancy in at least one outcome measure, of which 48 (75%) were attributable to changes in the primary outcome measure. Where lead authors could recall a reason for the discrepancy in the primary outcome, there was found to be potential bias in nearly a third (8/28, 29%) of these reviews, with changes being made after knowledge of the results from individual trials. Only 4(6%) of the 64 reviews with an outcome discrepancy described the reason for the change in the review, with no acknowledgment of the change in any of the eight reviews containing potentially biased discrepancies. Outcomes that were promoted in the review were more likely to be significant than if there was no discrepancy (relative risk 1.66 95% CI (1.10, 2.49), p = 0.02). CONCLUSION: In a review, making changes after seeing the results for included studies can lead to biased and misleading interpretation if the importance of the outcome (primary or secondary) is changed on the basis of those results. Our assessment showed that reasons for discrepancies with the protocol are not reported in the review, demonstrating an under-recognition of the problem. Complete transparency in the reporting of changes in outcome specification is vital; systematic reviewers should ensure that any legitimate changes to outcome specification are reported with reason in the review. Public Library of Science 2010-03-22 /pmc/articles/PMC2842442/ /pubmed/20339557 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0009810 Text en Kirkham et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kirkham, Jamie J.
Altman, Doug G.
Williamson, Paula R.
Bias Due to Changes in Specified Outcomes during the Systematic Review Process
title Bias Due to Changes in Specified Outcomes during the Systematic Review Process
title_full Bias Due to Changes in Specified Outcomes during the Systematic Review Process
title_fullStr Bias Due to Changes in Specified Outcomes during the Systematic Review Process
title_full_unstemmed Bias Due to Changes in Specified Outcomes during the Systematic Review Process
title_short Bias Due to Changes in Specified Outcomes during the Systematic Review Process
title_sort bias due to changes in specified outcomes during the systematic review process
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2842442/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20339557
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0009810
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