Analysis of heterogeneity in a systematic review using meta-regression technique.

Kenneth Lo, Matthew Stephenson, Craig Lockwood
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引用次数: 8

Abstract

Aim: Heterogeneity is an important consideration in systematic reviews, as high heterogeneity may imply that it is not suitable to perform meta-analysis. The degree of variation could be caused by clinical or methodological differences among the studies, or it could be due to the randomness of chance. Methods of assessing heterogeneity are calculating a statistical test for heterogeneity (the I value), visual evaluations of forest plots, conducting subgroup analysis or meta-regression. We conducted meta-regression on data of our previous systematic review on the effectiveness of robotic rehabilitation, and in this article, we present the findings and discuss its implications.

Method: In our meta-regression plots, plotted on the x-axis was the trial covariate (duration of intervention group therapy), and plotted on the y-axis was the effect size measure (standardized mean differences), with positive effect sizes favouring robotic intervention. Analysis using random effects was applied, and each study symbol was sized in proportion to its precision (inverse-variance weighting).

Results: Differences were observed in the meta-regression plots between the subgroups of therapy ratio = 0 and therapy ratio more than 0 for upper limb movement, lower limb walking and activities of daily living. For upper limb movement, positive linear relationships were found for both subgroups. However, in terms of the strength of the relationship, a stronger relationship was found for therapy ratio = 0. For lower limb walking, opposing linear relationships were found in both subgroups: therapy ratio = 0 had a negative linear relationship, whereas therapy ratio more than 0 had a positive linear relationship. For activities of daily living, positive linear relationships were found for both subgroups, but a stronger linear relationship was found for therapy ratio = 0.

Conclusion: From the meta-regression analysis, we found that differing levels of linear relationships and the varying spread of effect sizes across positive and negative ranges were the likely sources of heterogeneity. This was especially so in the meta-regression of lower limb walking, which showed opposing directions of linear relationships. The wider spread of effect sizes for therapy ratio = 0 could indicate that some robotic devices were more effective than others. In addition, for therapy ratio more than 0, the effect sizes were mainly found in the positive region, which implied that adding conventional training to robotic training was generally positive for robotic devices.

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运用元回归技术分析系统综述中的异质性。
目的:异质性是系统评价的一个重要考虑因素,因为高异质性可能意味着不适合进行荟萃分析。差异的程度可能是由临床或研究方法的差异引起的,也可能是由于机会的随机性。评估异质性的方法是计算异质性的统计检验(I值)、森林样地的目视评价、进行亚组分析或元回归。我们对之前关于机器人康复有效性的系统综述数据进行了meta回归,在本文中,我们提出了研究结果并讨论了其含义。方法:在我们的meta回归图中,x轴为试验协变量(干预组治疗持续时间),y轴为效应量测量(标准化平均差异),正效应量倾向于机器人干预。采用随机效应进行分析,每个研究符号的大小与其精度成比例(逆方差加权)。结果:在上肢运动、下肢行走和日常生活活动方面,治疗比率= 0和治疗比率大于0的亚组间的meta回归图有差异。对于上肢运动,两个亚组均发现正线性关系。然而,就关系的强度而言,治疗比率= 0时,关系更强。对于下肢行走,两个亚组均存在相反的线性关系:治疗比率= 0为负线性关系,而治疗比率大于0为正线性关系。对于日常生活活动,两个亚组都发现了正线性关系,但在治疗比率= 0时发现了更强的线性关系。结论:从meta回归分析中,我们发现不同程度的线性关系和效应大小在正、负范围内的不同分布可能是异质性的来源。这在下肢行走的元回归中尤其如此,显示出相反方向的线性关系。治疗比率= 0时效应大小的更大范围可能表明一些机器人设备比其他设备更有效。此外,当治疗比大于0时,效应量主要出现在正区域,这意味着在机器人训练中加入常规训练对机器人装置总体上是正的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
39
期刊介绍: ​​The International Journal of Evidence-Based Healthcare is the official journal of the Joanna Briggs Institute. It is a fully refereed journal that publishes manuscripts relating to evidence-based medicine and evidence-based practice. It publishes papers containing reliable evidence to assist health professionals in their evaluation and decision-making, and to inform health professionals, students and researchers of outcomes, debates and developments in evidence-based medicine and healthcare. ​ The journal provides a unique home for publication of systematic reviews (quantitative, qualitative, mixed methods, economic, scoping and prevalence) and implementation projects including the synthesis, transfer and utilisation of evidence in clinical practice. Original scholarly work relating to the synthesis (translation science), transfer (distribution) and utilization (implementation science and evaluation) of evidence to inform multidisciplinary healthcare practice is considered for publication. The journal also publishes original scholarly commentary pieces relating to the generation and synthesis of evidence for practice and quality improvement, the use and evaluation of evidence in practice, and the process of conducting systematic reviews (methodology) which covers quantitative, qualitative, mixed methods, economic, scoping and prevalence methods. In addition, the journal’s content includes implementation projects including the transfer and utilisation of evidence in clinical practice as well as providing a forum for the debate of issues surrounding evidence-based healthcare.
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