Adjusting for publication bias in the presence of heterogeneity
Top Cited Papers
- 12 June 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Statistics in Medicine
- Vol. 22 (13) , 2113-2126
- https://doi.org/10.1002/sim.1461
Abstract
It is known that the existence of publication bias can influence the conclusions of a meta‐analysis. Some methods have been developed to deal with publication bias, but issues remain. One particular method called ‘trim and fill’ is designed to adjust for publication bias. The method, which is intuitively appealing and comprehensible by non‐statisticians, is based on a simple and popular graphical tool called the funnel plot. We present a simulation study designed to evaluate the behaviour of this method. Our results indicate that when the studies are heterogeneous (that is, when they estimate different effects), trim and fill may inappropriately adjust for publication bias where none exists. We found that trim and fill may spuriously adjust for non‐existent bias if (i) the variability among studies causes some precisely estimated studies to have effects far from the global mean or (ii) an inverse relationship between treatment efficacy and sample size is introduced by the studies' a priori power calculations. The results suggest that the funnel plot itself is inappropriate for heterogeneous meta‐analyses. Selection modelling is an alternative method warranting further study. It performed better than trim and fill in our simulations, although its frequency of convergence varied, depending on the simulation parameters. Copyright © 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.Keywords
This publication has 40 references indexed in Scilit:
- Inflation of type I error rate in two statistical tests for the detection of publication bias in meta‐analyses with binary outcomesStatistics in Medicine, 2002
- Publication Bias and Meta-Analysis for 2×2 Tables: An Average Markov Chain Monte Carlo EM AlgorithmJournal of the Royal Statistical Society Series B: Statistical Methodology, 2002
- A Nonparametric “Trim and Fill” Method of Accounting for Publication Bias in Meta-AnalysisJournal of the American Statistical Association, 2000
- Religious involvement and mortality: A meta-analytic review.Health Psychology, 2000
- What Works?: Selectivity Models and Meta-AnalysisJournal of the Royal Statistical Society Series A: Statistics in Society, 1999
- Publication bias in meta-analysis: a Bayesian data-augmentation approach to account for issues exemplified in the passive smoking debateStatistical Science, 1997
- Hierarchical Selection Models with Applications in Meta-AnalysisJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1997
- An Approach for Assessing Publication Bias Prior to Performing a Meta-AnalysisStatistical Science, 1992
- Meta-analysis in clinical trialsControlled Clinical Trials, 1986
- The file drawer problem and tolerance for null results.Psychological Bulletin, 1979