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Details

Autor(en) / Beteiligte
Titel
Individual participant data meta‐analysis versus aggregate data meta‐analysis: A case study in eczema and food allergy prevention
Ist Teil von
  • Clinical and experimental allergy, 2022-05, Vol.52 (5), p.628-645
Ort / Verlag
England: Wiley Subscription Services, Inc
Erscheinungsjahr
2022
Link zum Volltext
Quelle
Wiley Blackwell Single Titles
Beschreibungen/Notizen
  • Introduction Meta‐analysis traditionally uses aggregate data from published reports. Individual Participant Data (IPD) meta‐analysis, which obtains and synthesizes participant‐level data, is potentially more informative, but resource‐intensive. The impact on the findings of meta‐analyses using IPD in comparison with aggregate data has rarely been formally evaluated. Methods We conducted a secondary analysis of a Cochrane systematic review of skincare interventions for preventing eczema and food allergy in infants to identify the impact of the analytical choice on the review's findings. We used aggregate data meta‐analysis only and contrasted the results against those of the originally published IPD meta‐analysis. All meta‐analysis used random effects inverse variance models. Certainty of evidence was evaluated using GRADE. Results The pooled treatment effects for the Cochrane systematic review's co‐primary outcomes of eczema and food allergy were similar in IPD meta‐analysis (eczema RR 1.03, 95% CI 0.81, 1.31; I241%, 7 studies 3075 participants), and aggregate meta‐analysis (eczema RR 1.01 95% CI 0.77, 1.33; I253%, 7 studies, 3089 participants). In aggregate meta‐analysis, the statistical heterogeneity could not be explained but using IPD it was explained by one trial which used a different, bathing intervention. For IPD meta‐analysis, risk of bias was assessed as lower and more adverse event data were available compared with aggregate meta‐analysis. This resulted in higher certainty of evidence, especially for adverse events. IPD meta‐analysis enabled analysis of treatment interactions by age and hereditary eczema risk; and analysis of the effect of treatment adherence using pooled complier‐adjusted‐causal‐effect analysis, none of which was possible in aggregate meta‐analysis. Conclusions For this systematic review, IPD did not significantly change primary outcome risk ratios compared with aggregate data meta‐analysis. However, certainty of evidence, safety outcomes, subgroup and adherence analyses were significantly different using IPD. This demonstrates benefits of adopting an IPD approach to meta‐analysis. Benefits of an IPD approach to meta‐analysis were demonstrated. Risk ratios were similar, but IPD allowed a conclusion that skincare interventions probably do not affect eczema risk, compared with a conclusion that they may not affect eczema risk when using aggregate data meta‐analysis, due to unexplained statistical heterogeneity in the latter. GRADE certainty of evidence ratings, adverse events analyses, subgroup and adherence analyses were either significantly different with IPD or only possible with IPD compared with aggregate data meta‐analysis.

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