Assessing key assumptions of network meta-analysis: a review of methods

S. Donegan, P. Williamson, Umberto D'Alessandro, C.T. Smith

    Research output: Contribution to journalReviewpeer-review

    Abstract

    Background
    Homogeneity and consistency assumptions underlie network meta-analysis (NMA). Methods exist to assess the assumptions but they are rarely and poorly applied. We review and illustrate methods to assess homogeneity and consistency.

    Methods
    Eligible articles focussed on indirect comparison or NMA methodology. Articles were sought by hand-searching and scanning references (March 2013). Assumption assessment methods described in the articles were reviewed, and applied to compare anti-malarial drugs.

    Results
    116 articles were included. Methods to assess homogeneity were: comparing characteristics across trials; comparing trial-specific treatment effects; using hypothesis tests or statistical measures; applying fixed-effect and random-effects pair-wise meta-analysis; and investigating treatment effect-modifiers. Methods to assess consistency were: comparing characteristics; investigating treatment effect-modifiers; comparing outcome measurements in the referent group; node-splitting; inconsistency modelling; hypothesis tests; back transformation; multidimensional scaling; a two-stage approach; and a graph-theoretical method.

    For the malaria example, heterogeneity existed for some comparisons that was unexplained by investigating treatment effect-modifiers. Inconsistency was detected using node-splitting and inconsistency modelling. It was unclear whether the covariates explained the inconsistency.

    Conclusions
    Presently, we advocate applying existing assessment methods collectively to gain the best understanding possible regarding whether assumptions are reasonable. In our example, consistency was questionable; therefore the NMA results may be unreliable.
    Original languageEnglish
    JournalResearch Synthesis Methods
    Volume4
    Issue number4
    Pages (from-to)291-323
    Number of pages33
    ISSN1759-2879
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2013

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'Assessing key assumptions of network meta-analysis: a review of methods'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this