Assessing the agreement of treatment effect estimates from meta-analyses based on abbreviated or comprehensive literature searches.; Meta-epidemiological study. We abbreviated 47 comprehensive Cochrane review searches and searched MEDLINE/Embase/CENTRAL alone, in combination, with/without checking references (658 new searches). We compared one meta-analysis from each review with recalculated ones based on abbreviated searches.; The 47 original meta-analyses included 444 trials (median 6 per review [IQR 3-11]) with 360045 participants (median 1371 per review [IQR 685-8041]). Depending on the search approach, abbreviated searches led to identical effect estimates in 34%-79% of meta-analyses, to different effect estimates with the same directi...
A conventional meta-analysis may be performed using studies which are available at individual patien...
Background: There is considerable debate as to the relative merits of using randomised controlled tr...
Background: There is considerable debate as to the relative merits of using randomised controlled tr...
OBJECTIVES: The objective of this study was to assess the agreement of treatment effect estimates fr...
Abstract Background Systematic reviews offer the most reliable and valid support for health policy d...
Objectives To systematically explore the methodological factors underpinning discrepancies in the p...
IMPORTANCE: A persistent dilemma when performing meta-analyses is whether all available trials shoul...
Meta-analyses conducted via the Cochrane Collaboration adhere to strict methodological and reporting...
<p>This figure reports the number of times that Cochrane and non-Cochrane reviews were cited by othe...
ObjectivesTo assess the prevalence of statistically significant treatment effects, adverse events an...
A meta-analysis may provide more conclusive results than a single trial. The major cost of meta-anal...
Objective: To explore whether systematic reviewers selectively include trial effect estimates in met...
OBJECTIVE: A meta-analysis may provide more conclusive results than a single trial. The major cost o...
Objective To investigate the agreement between direct and indirect comparisons of competing healthca...
Objective: A meta-analysis may provide more conclusive results than a single trial. The major cost o...
A conventional meta-analysis may be performed using studies which are available at individual patien...
Background: There is considerable debate as to the relative merits of using randomised controlled tr...
Background: There is considerable debate as to the relative merits of using randomised controlled tr...
OBJECTIVES: The objective of this study was to assess the agreement of treatment effect estimates fr...
Abstract Background Systematic reviews offer the most reliable and valid support for health policy d...
Objectives To systematically explore the methodological factors underpinning discrepancies in the p...
IMPORTANCE: A persistent dilemma when performing meta-analyses is whether all available trials shoul...
Meta-analyses conducted via the Cochrane Collaboration adhere to strict methodological and reporting...
<p>This figure reports the number of times that Cochrane and non-Cochrane reviews were cited by othe...
ObjectivesTo assess the prevalence of statistically significant treatment effects, adverse events an...
A meta-analysis may provide more conclusive results than a single trial. The major cost of meta-anal...
Objective: To explore whether systematic reviewers selectively include trial effect estimates in met...
OBJECTIVE: A meta-analysis may provide more conclusive results than a single trial. The major cost o...
Objective To investigate the agreement between direct and indirect comparisons of competing healthca...
Objective: A meta-analysis may provide more conclusive results than a single trial. The major cost o...
A conventional meta-analysis may be performed using studies which are available at individual patien...
Background: There is considerable debate as to the relative merits of using randomised controlled tr...
Background: There is considerable debate as to the relative merits of using randomised controlled tr...