4.6 Article

Observed intervention effects for mortality in randomised clinical trials: a methodological study protocol

期刊

BMJ OPEN
卷 13, 期 6, 页码 -

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BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-072550

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ANAESTHETICS; INTENSIVE & CRITICAL CARE; ACCIDENT & EMERGENCY MEDICINE

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This study aims to estimate the range of observed intervention effects for all-cause mortality in trials included in Cochrane Reviews. Cochrane Reviews will be clustered according to the registered Cochrane Review Group, and statistical analyses will be conducted for each group and overall. The results will report the median relative risk, IQR, and the proportion of trials within different ranges of relative risk.
IntroductionIt is essential to choose a realistic anticipated intervention effect when calculating a sample size for a randomised clinical trial. Unfortunately, anticipated intervention effects are often inflated, when compared with the 'true' intervention effects. This is documented for mortality in critical care trials. A similar pattern might exist across different medical specialties. This study aims to estimate the range of observed intervention effects for all-cause mortality in trials included in Cochrane Reviews, within each Cochrane Review Group.Methods and analysisWe will include randomised clinical trials assessing all-cause mortality as an outcome. Trials will be identified from Cochrane Reviews published in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. Cochrane Reviews will be clustered according to the registered Cochrane Review Group (eg, Anaesthesia, Emergency and Critical Care) and the statistical analyses will be conducted for each Cochrane Review Group and overall. The median relative risk and IQR for all-cause mortality and the proportion of trials with a relative all-cause mortality risk within seven different ranges will be reported (relative risk below 0.70, 0.70-0.79, 0.80-0.89, 0.90-1.09, 1.10-1.19, 1.20-1.30 and above 1.30). Subgroup analyses will explore the effects of original design, sample size, risk of bias, disease, intervention type, follow-up length, participating centres, funding type, information size and outcome hierarchy.Ethics and disseminationSince we will use summary data from trials already approved by relevant ethical committees, this study does not require ethical approval. Regardless of our findings, the results will be published in an international peer-reviewed journal.

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