4.5 Article

Multivariate meta-analysis of prognostic factor studies with multiple cut-points and/or methods of measurement

Journal

STATISTICS IN MEDICINE
Volume 34, Issue 17, Pages 2481-2496

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/sim.6493

Keywords

multivariate meta-analysis; prognostic factors; odds ratios and hazard ratios; cut-points; heterogeneity

Funding

  1. MRC Partnership Grant for the PROGnosis RESearch Strategy (PROGRESS) group [G0902393]
  2. MRC Methodology Research Grant in Multivariate Meta-analysis [MR/J013595/1]
  3. MRC [G0902393, MR/J013595/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  4. Medical Research Council [MR/J013595/1, G0902393, MR/K006584/1, 1587797] Funding Source: researchfish

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A prognostic factor is any measure that is associated with the risk of future health outcomes in those with existing disease. Often, the prognostic ability of a factor is evaluated in multiple studies. However, meta-analysis is difficult because primary studies often use different methods of measurement and/or different cut-points to dichotomise continuous factors into 'high' and 'low' groups; selective reporting is also common. We illustrate how multivariate random effects meta-analysis models can accommodate multiple prognostic effect estimates from the same study, relating to multiple cut-points and/or methods of measurement. The models account for within-study and between-study correlations, which utilises more information and reduces the impact of unreported cut-points and/or measurement methods in some studies. The applicability of the approach is improved with individual participant data and by assuming a functional relationship between prognostic effect and cut-point to reduce the number of unknown parameters. The models provide important inferential results for each cut-point and method of measurement, including the summary prognostic effect, the between-study variance and a 95% prediction interval for the prognostic effect in new populations. Two applications are presented. The first reveals that, in a multivariate meta-analysis using published results, the Apgar score is prognostic of neonatal mortality but effect sizes are smaller at most cut-points than previously thought. In the second, a multivariate meta-analysis of two methods of measurement provides weak evidence that microvessel density is prognostic of mortality in lung cancer, even when individual participant data are available so that a continuous prognostic trend is examined (rather than cut-points). (C) 2015 The Authors. Statistics in Medicine Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

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