Methodological criteria for the assessment of moderators in systematic reviews of randomised controlled trials: a consensus study

Tamar Pincus, Clare Miles, Robert Froud, Martin Underwood, Dawn Carnes and Stephanie J. C. Taylor

(2011)

Tamar Pincus, Clare Miles, Robert Froud, Martin Underwood, Dawn Carnes and Stephanie J. C. Taylor (2011) Methodological criteria for the assessment of moderators in systematic reviews of randomised controlled trials: a consensus study. BMC Medical Research Methodology , 11 (14). pp. . ISSN 1471-2288

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Abstract

Background Current methodological guidelines provide advice about the assessment of sub-group analysis within RCTs, but do not specify explicit criteria for assessment. Our objective was to provide researchers with a set of criteria that will facilitate the grading of evidence for moderators, in systematic reviews. Method We developed a set of criteria from methodological manuscripts (n = 18) using snowballing technique, and electronic database searches. Criteria were reviewed by an international Delphi panel (n = 21), comprising authors who have published methodological papers in this area, and researchers who have been active in the study of sub-group analysis in RCTs. We used the Research ANd Development/University of California Los Angeles appropriateness method to assess consensus on the quantitative data. Free responses were coded for consensus and disagreement. In a subsequent round additional criteria were extracted from the Cochrane Reviewers' Handbook, and the process was repeated. Results The recommendations are that meta-analysts report both confirmatory and exploratory findings for sub-groups analysis. Confirmatory findings must only come from studies in which a specific theory/evidence based a-priori statement is made. Exploratory findings may be used to inform future/subsequent trials. However, for inclusion in the meta-analysis of moderators, the following additional criteria should be applied to each study: Baseline factors should be measured prior to randomisation, measurement of baseline factors should be of adequate reliability and validity, and a specific test of the interaction between baseline factors and interventions must be presented. Conclusions There is consensus from a group of 21 international experts that methodological criteria to assess moderators within systematic reviews of RCTs is both timely and necessary. The consensus from the experts resulted in five criteria divided into two groups when synthesising evidence: confirmatory findings to support hypotheses about moderators and exploratory findings to inform future research. These recommendations are discussed in reference to previous recommendations for evaluating and reporting moderator studies.

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This is a Published version
This version's date is: 31/01/2011
This item is peer reviewed

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https://repository.royalholloway.ac.uk/items/2c051ada-0e40-b25c-ed7e-55e8e886e13e/1/

Item TypeJournal Article
TitleMethodological criteria for the assessment of moderators in systematic reviews of randomised controlled trials: a consensus study
AuthorsPincus, Tamar
Miles, Clare
Froud, Robert
Underwood, Martin
Carnes, Dawn
Taylor, Stephanie
DepartmentsFaculty of Science\Psychology

Identifiers

doi10.1186/1471-2288-11-14

Deposited by () on 08-Mar-2011 in Royal Holloway Research Online.Last modified on 08-Mar-2011

Notes

© 2011 Pincus et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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