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Simulation results on the performance of statistical methods in cumulative meta analysis

Author

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  • Kulinskaya, Elena
  • Mah, Eung Yaw

    (University of East Anglia)

Abstract

Cumulative meta-analysis (CMA) is a process of updating the results of existing meta-analysis to incorporate new study results. This is a popular way to present time-varying evidence. We investigate the properties of CMA, suggest possible improvements and provide the first in-depth simulation study of the use of CMA and CUSUM methods for detection of temporal trends in random-effects meta-analysis. We use the standardized mean difference (SMD) as an effect measure of interest. For CMA, we compare the standard inverse-variance-weighted estimation of the overall effect using REML-estimated between-study variance $\tau^2$ with the sample-size-weighted estimation of the effect combined with Kulinskaya-Dollinger-Bjørkestøl (2011) (KDB) estimation of $\tau^2$. For all methods, we consider type 1 error under no shift and power under shift in the mean. To ameliorate the lack of power in CMA, we introduce the two-stage CMA, where the heterogeneity variance $\tau^2$ is estimated at stage 1 (first 5-10 studies), and the further CMA monitors a target value of effect, keeping the $\tau^2$ value fixed. We recommend the use of this two-stage CMA combined with cumulative testing for positive shift in $\tau^2$.

Suggested Citation

  • Kulinskaya, Elena & Mah, Eung Yaw, 2021. "Simulation results on the performance of statistical methods in cumulative meta analysis," MetaArXiv 8t4pf, Center for Open Science.
  • Handle: RePEc:osf:metaar:8t4pf
    DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/8t4pf
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    2. Jessica Gurevitch & Julia Koricheva & Shinichi Nakagawa & Gavin Stewart, 2018. "Meta-analysis and the science of research synthesis," Nature, Nature, vol. 555(7695), pages 175-182, March.
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