The use of one-stage meta-analytic method based on individual participant data for binary adverse events under the rule of three: a simulation study

Objective In evidence synthesis practice, dealing with binary rare adverse events (AEs) is a challenging problem. The pooled estimates for rare AEs through traditional inverse variance (IV), Mantel-Haenszel (MH), and Yusuf-Peto (Peto) methods are suboptimal, as the biases tend to be large. We propos...

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Main Authors: Liang-Liang Cheng, Ke Ju, Rui-Lie Cai, Chang Xu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2019-01-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/6295.pdf
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spelling doaj-fb62809ac56f4a94a4628ba6e504a76b2020-11-25T00:03:26ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592019-01-017e629510.7717/peerj.6295The use of one-stage meta-analytic method based on individual participant data for binary adverse events under the rule of three: a simulation studyLiang-Liang Cheng0Ke Ju1Rui-Lie Cai2Chang Xu3West China School of Public Health, Sichuan University, Chengdu, ChinaWest China School of Public Health, Sichuan University, Chengdu, ChinaWest China School of Public Health, Sichuan University, Chengdu, ChinaChinese Evidence Based Medicine Center, West China Hospital of Sichuan University, Chengdu, ChinaObjective In evidence synthesis practice, dealing with binary rare adverse events (AEs) is a challenging problem. The pooled estimates for rare AEs through traditional inverse variance (IV), Mantel-Haenszel (MH), and Yusuf-Peto (Peto) methods are suboptimal, as the biases tend to be large. We proposed the “one-stage” approach based on multilevel variance component logistic regression (MVCL) to handle this problem. Methods We used simulations to generate trials of individual participant data (IPD) with a series of predefined parameters. We compared the performance of the MVCL “one-stage” approach and the five classical methods (fixed/random effect IV, fixed/random effect MH, and Peto) for rare binary AEs under different scenarios, which included different sample size setting rules, effect sizes, between-study heterogeneity, and numbers of studies in each meta-analysis. The percentage bias, mean square error (MSE), coverage probability, and average width of the 95% confidence intervals were used as performance indicators. Results We set 52 scenarios and each scenario was simulated 1,000 times. Under the rule of three (a sample size setting rule to ensure a 95% chance of detecting at least one AE case), the MVCL “one-stage” IPD method had the lowest percentage bias in most of the situations and the bias remained at a very low level (<10%), when compared to IV, MH, and Peto methods. In addition, the MVCL “one-stage” IPD method generally had the lowest MSE and the narrowest average width of 95% confidence intervals. However, it did not show better coverage probability over the other five methods. Conclusions The MVCL “one-stage” IPD meta-analysis is a useful method to handle binary rare events and superior compared to traditional methods under the rule of three. Further meta-analyses may take account of the “one-stage” IPD method for pooling rare event data.https://peerj.com/articles/6295.pdfIPD meta-analysisEvidence synthesis methodsMultilevel logisticRule of threeBinary rare adverse event
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Liang-Liang Cheng
Ke Ju
Rui-Lie Cai
Chang Xu
spellingShingle Liang-Liang Cheng
Ke Ju
Rui-Lie Cai
Chang Xu
The use of one-stage meta-analytic method based on individual participant data for binary adverse events under the rule of three: a simulation study
PeerJ
IPD meta-analysis
Evidence synthesis methods
Multilevel logistic
Rule of three
Binary rare adverse event
author_facet Liang-Liang Cheng
Ke Ju
Rui-Lie Cai
Chang Xu
author_sort Liang-Liang Cheng
title The use of one-stage meta-analytic method based on individual participant data for binary adverse events under the rule of three: a simulation study
title_short The use of one-stage meta-analytic method based on individual participant data for binary adverse events under the rule of three: a simulation study
title_full The use of one-stage meta-analytic method based on individual participant data for binary adverse events under the rule of three: a simulation study
title_fullStr The use of one-stage meta-analytic method based on individual participant data for binary adverse events under the rule of three: a simulation study
title_full_unstemmed The use of one-stage meta-analytic method based on individual participant data for binary adverse events under the rule of three: a simulation study
title_sort use of one-stage meta-analytic method based on individual participant data for binary adverse events under the rule of three: a simulation study
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Objective In evidence synthesis practice, dealing with binary rare adverse events (AEs) is a challenging problem. The pooled estimates for rare AEs through traditional inverse variance (IV), Mantel-Haenszel (MH), and Yusuf-Peto (Peto) methods are suboptimal, as the biases tend to be large. We proposed the “one-stage” approach based on multilevel variance component logistic regression (MVCL) to handle this problem. Methods We used simulations to generate trials of individual participant data (IPD) with a series of predefined parameters. We compared the performance of the MVCL “one-stage” approach and the five classical methods (fixed/random effect IV, fixed/random effect MH, and Peto) for rare binary AEs under different scenarios, which included different sample size setting rules, effect sizes, between-study heterogeneity, and numbers of studies in each meta-analysis. The percentage bias, mean square error (MSE), coverage probability, and average width of the 95% confidence intervals were used as performance indicators. Results We set 52 scenarios and each scenario was simulated 1,000 times. Under the rule of three (a sample size setting rule to ensure a 95% chance of detecting at least one AE case), the MVCL “one-stage” IPD method had the lowest percentage bias in most of the situations and the bias remained at a very low level (<10%), when compared to IV, MH, and Peto methods. In addition, the MVCL “one-stage” IPD method generally had the lowest MSE and the narrowest average width of 95% confidence intervals. However, it did not show better coverage probability over the other five methods. Conclusions The MVCL “one-stage” IPD meta-analysis is a useful method to handle binary rare events and superior compared to traditional methods under the rule of three. Further meta-analyses may take account of the “one-stage” IPD method for pooling rare event data.
topic IPD meta-analysis
Evidence synthesis methods
Multilevel logistic
Rule of three
Binary rare adverse event
url https://peerj.com/articles/6295.pdf
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