Evaluation of old and new tests of heterogeneity in epidemiologic meta- analysis

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Abstract

The identification of heterogeneity in effects between studies is a key issue in meta-analyses of observational studies, since it is critical for determining whether it is appropriate to pool the individual results into one summary measure. The result of a hypothesis test is often used as the decision criterion. In this paper, the authors use a large simulation study patterned from the key features of five published epidemiologic meta-analyses to investigate the type I error and statistical power of five previously proposed asymptotic homogeneity tests, a parametric bootstrap version of each of the tests, and τ2-bootstrap, a test proposed by the authors. The results show that the asymptotic Der-Simonian and Laird Q statistic and the bootstrap versions of the other tests give the correct type I error under the null hypothesis but that all of the tests considered have low statistical power, especially when the number of studies included in the meta-analysis is small (<20). From the point of view of validity, power, and computational ease, the Q statistic is clearly the best choice. The authors found that the performance of all of the tests considered did not depend appreciably upon the value of the pooled odds ratio, both for size and for power. Because tests for heterogeneity will often be underpowered, random effects models can be used routinely, and heterogeneity can be quantified by means of R(I), the proportion of the total variance of the pooled effect measure due to between- study variance, and CV(B), the between-study coefficient of variation.

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Takkouche, B., Cadarso-Suárez, C., & Spiegelman, D. (1999). Evaluation of old and new tests of heterogeneity in epidemiologic meta- analysis. American Journal of Epidemiology, 150(2), 206–215. https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a009981

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