Artículos de revistas
Systematic reviews experience major limitations in reporting absolute effects
Fecha
2016Registro en:
Journal of Clinical Epidemiology 72 (2016) 16-26
0895-4356
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclinepi.2015.11.002
Autor
Alonso Coello, Pablo
Carrasco Labra, Alonso
Brignardello Petersen, Romina
Neumann, Ignacio
Akl, Elie
Vernooij, Robin
Johnston, Brad
Sun, Xin
Briel, Matthias
Busse, Jason
Ebrahim, Shanil
Granados, Carlos
Iorio, Alfonso
Irfan, Affan
Martínez García, Laura
Mustafa, Reem
Ramírez Morers, Anggie
Selva, Anna
Solà, Iván
Sanabria, Andrea
Tikkinen, Kari
Vandvik, Per
Zazueta, Oscar
Zhang, Yuqing
Zhou, Qi
Schünemann, Holger
Guyatt, Gordon H.
Institución
Resumen
Objectives: Expressing treatment effects in relative terms yields larger numbers than expressions in absolute terms, affecting the judgment
of the clinicians and patients regarding the treatment options. It is uncertain how authors of systematic reviews (SRs) absolute effect
estimates are reported in. We therefore undertook a systematic survey to identify and describe the reporting and methods for calculating
absolute effect estimates in SRs.
Study Design and Setting: Two reviewers independently screened title, abstract, and full text and extracted data from a sample of
Cochrane and non-Cochrane SRs. We used regression analyses to examine the association between study characteristics and the reporting
of absolute estimates for the most patient-important outcome.
Results: We included 202 SRs (98 Cochrane and 104 non-Cochrane), most of which (92.1%) included standard meta-analyses
including relative estimates of effect. Of the 202 SRs, 73 (36.1%) reported absolute effect estimates for the most patient-important outcome.
SRs with statistically significant effects were more likely to report absolute estimates (odds ratio, 2.26; 95% confidence interval: 1.08, 4.74).
The most commonly reported absolute estimates were: for each intervention, risk of adverse outcomes expressed as a percentage (41.1%);
number needed to treat (26.0%); and risk for each intervention expressed as natural units or natural frequencies (24.7%). In 12.3% of the
SRs that reported absolute effect estimates for both benefit and harm outcomes, harm outcomes were reported exclusively as absolute
estimates. Exclusively reporting of beneficial outcomes as absolute estimates occurred in 6.8% of the SRs.
Conclusions: Most SRs do not report absolute effects. Those that do often report them inadequately, thus requiring users of SRs to
generate their own estimates of absolute effects. For any apparently effective or harmful intervention, SR authors should report both
absolute and relative estimates to optimize the interpretation of their findings.