4.5 Article

Estimating publication bias in meta-analyses of peer-reviewed studies: A meta-meta-analysis across disciplines and journal tiers

期刊

RESEARCH SYNTHESIS METHODS
卷 12, 期 2, 页码 176-191

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jrsm.1464

关键词

meta‐ analysis; publication bias; reproducibility; scientific method; selective reporting

资金

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 CA222147]
  2. John E. Fetzer Memorial Trust [R2020-16]
  3. Quantitative Sciences Unit through the NIH-funded Stanford Diabetes Research Center [P30DK116074]
  4. Biostatistics Shared Resource (BSR) of the NIH-funded Stanford Cancer Institute [P30CA124435]
  5. NIH-funded Biostatistics, Epidemiology and Research Design (BERD) Shared Resource of Stanford University's Clinical and Translational Education and Research [UL1TR003142]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study analyzed publication bias in 63 meta-analyses and found that significant results in the expected direction were not significantly more likely to be published than non-significant results or those in the unexpected direction. There was no indication of more publication bias in higher-tier journals compared to lower-tier journals, or in earlier studies compared to later studies.
Selective publication and reporting in individual papers compromise the scientific record, but are meta-analyses as compromised as their constituent studies? We systematically sampled 63 meta-analyses (each comprising at least 40 studies) in PLoS One, top medical journals, top psychology journals, and Metalab, an online, open-data database of developmental psychology meta-analyses. We empirically estimated publication bias in each, including only the peer-reviewed studies. Across all meta-analyses, we estimated that statistically significant results in the expected direction were only 1.17 times more likely to be published than nonsignificant results or those in the unexpected direction (95% CI: [0.93, 1.47]), with a confidence interval substantially overlapping the null. Comparable estimates were 0.83 for meta-analyses in PLoS One, 1.02 for top medical journals, 1.54 for top psychology journals, and 4.70 for Metalab. The severity of publication bias did differ across individual meta-analyses; in a small minority (10%; 95% CI: [2%, 21%]), publication bias appeared to favor significant results in the expected direction by more than threefold. We estimated that for 89% of meta-analyses, the amount of publication bias that would be required to attenuate the point estimate to the null exceeded the amount of publication bias estimated to be actually present in the vast majority of meta-analyses from the relevant scientific discipline (exceeding the 95th percentile of publication bias). Study-level measures (statistical significance with a point estimate in the expected direction and point estimate size) did not indicate more publication bias in higher-tier versus lower-tier journals, nor in the earliest studies published on a topic versus later studies. Overall, we conclude that the mere act of performing a meta-analysis with a large number of studies (at least 40) and that includes non-headline results may largely mitigate publication bias in meta-analyses, suggesting optimism about the validity of meta-analytic results.

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