|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ScienceDirect.com - Journal of Clinical Epidemiology - Most meta-analyses of drug interventions have narrow scopes and many focus on specific agents
Abstract
Conclusion
The scope of meta-analysis publications frequently is narrow and shaped to serve particular agents.
Objective
To
assess the extent to which meta-analysis publications of drugs and
biologics focus on specific named agents or even only a single agent,
and identify characteristics associated with such focus.
Study Design and Setting
We
evaluated 499 articles with meta-analyses published in 2010 and
estimated how many did not cover all the available comparisons of tested
interventions for a given condition (not all-inclusive); focused on
specific named agent(s), or focused strictly on comparisons of only one
specific active agent vs. placebo/no treatment or different
doses/schedules.
Results
Of
499 eligible articles, 403 (80.8%) were not all-inclusive, 214 (42.9%)
covered only specific named agent(s), and 74 (14.8%) examined only
comparisons with one active agent vs. placebo/no treatment or different
doses/schedules. Only 39 articles (7.8%) covered all possible
indications for the examined agent(s). After adjusting for type of
treatment/field, focus on specific named agent(s) was associated with
publication in journal venues (odds ratio [OR]: 1.95; 95% confidence
interval [CI]: 1.17–3.26) vs. Cochrane, industry sponsoring (OR: 3.94;
95% CI: 1.66–10.66), and individual patient data analyses (OR: 6.59; 95%
CI: 2.24–19.39). Individual patient data analyses primarily (29/34)
focused on specific named agent(s).
Conclusion
The scope of meta-analysis publications frequently is narrow and shaped to serve particular agents.
Nice scope of study on drug intervention. Performing recovery companion services result on research study like this would be a great idea.
ReplyDelete