4.3 Article

Using individual participant data to improve network meta-analysis projects

Journal

BMJ EVIDENCE-BASED MEDICINE
Volume 28, Issue 3, Pages 197-203

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/bmjebm-2022-111931

Keywords

policy; evidence-based practice

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Network meta-analysis combines evidence from randomized trials to compare the efficacy of multiple treatments. Individual participant data (IPD) have potential advantages in network meta-analysis, providing more precise, reliable, and informative results, allowing treatment comparisons for individual patients and targeted populations based on their specific characteristics.
A network meta-analysis combines the evidence from existing randomised trials about the comparative efficacy of multiple treatments. It allows direct and indirect evidence about each comparison to be included in the same analysis, and provides a coherent framework to compare and rank treatments. A traditional network meta-analysis uses aggregate data (eg, treatment effect estimates and standard errors) obtained from publications or trial investigators. An alternative approach is to obtain, check, harmonise and meta-analyse the individual participant data (IPD) from each trial. In this article, we describe potential advantages of IPD for network meta-analysis projects, emphasising five key benefits: (1) improving the quality and scope of information available for inclusion in the meta-analysis, (2) examining and plotting distributions of covariates across trials (eg, for potential effect modifiers), (3) standardising and improving the analysis of each trial, (4) adjusting for prognostic factors to allow a network meta-analysis of conditional treatment effects and (5) including treatment-covariate interactions (effect modifiers) to allow relative treatment effects to vary by participant-level covariate values (eg, age, baseline depression score). A running theme of all these benefits is that they help examine and reduce heterogeneity (differences in the true treatment effect between trials) and inconsistency (differences in the true treatment effect between direct and indirect evidence) in the network. As a consequence, an IPD network meta-analysis has the potential for more precise, reliable and informative results for clinical practice and even allows treatment comparisons to be made for individual patients and targeted populations conditional on their particular characteristics.

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