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TITLE:

THE OUTCOME EFFECT REPORTING BIAS IN RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED STUDIES ON A COHORT OF SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS

AUTHORS:

Dr Iqra Qureshi,Dr Saira,Dr Muhammad Shaheryar

ABSTRACT:

To examine the prevalence of consequence stating bias, the selection for publication of a subset of the original recorded outcome variables on the basis of the results and its impact on Cochrane reviews. A nine-point classification system for missing outcome data in randomized trials was developed and applied to the trials assessed in a large, unselected cohort of Cochrane systematic reviews. A sensitivity analysis was undertaken to assess the impact of outcome reporting bias on reviews that included a single meta-analysis of the review of primary outcome. More than half (157/283 (55%)) the reviews did not include full data for the review primary outcome of interest from all eligible trials. The median amount of review outcome data missing for any reason was 10%, whereas 50% or more of the potential data were missing in 70 (25%) reviews. It was clear from the publications for 155 (6%) of the 2486 assessable trials that the researchers had measured and analyzed the review primary outcome but did not report or only partially reported the results. For reports that did not mention the review primary outcome, our classification regarding the presence of outcome reporting bias was shown to have a sensitivity of 88% (95% CI 65% to 100%) and specificity of 80% (95% CI 69% to 90%) on the basis of responses from 62 trialists. A third of Cochrane reviews (96/283 (34%)) contained at least one trial with high suspicion of outcome reporting bias for the review primary outcome. In a sensitivity analysis undertaken for 81 reviews with a single meta-analysis of the primary outcome of interest, the treatment effect estimate was reduced by 20% or more in 19 (23%). Of the 42 meta-analyses with a statistically significant result only, eight (19%) became non-significant after adjustment for outcome reporting bias and 11 (26%) would have overestimated the treatment effect by 20% or more. Outcome reporting bias is an under-recognized problem that affects the conclusions in a substantial proportion of Cochrane reviews. Individuals conducting systematic reviews need to address explicitly the issue of missing outcome data for their review to be considered a reliable source of evidence. Extra care is required during data extraction, reviewers should identify when a trial reports that an outcome was measured but no results were reported, or events observed and contact with trialists should be encouraged.

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