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Predictive distributions for between‐study heterogeneity and simple methods for their application in Bayesian meta‐analysis
Authors:Rebecca M Turner  Dan Jackson  Yinghui Wei  Simon G Thompson  Julian P T Higgins
Institution:1. MRC Biostatistics Unit, Cambridge Institute of Public Health, Cambridge, U.K.;2. School of Computing and Mathematics, University of Plymouth, Plymouth, U.K.;3. Department of Public Health and Primary Care, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, U.K.;4. School of Social and Community Medicine, University of Bristol, Bristol, U.K.;5. Centre for Reviews and Dissemination, University of York, York, U.K.
Abstract:Numerous meta‐analyses in healthcare research combine results from only a small number of studies, for which the variance representing between‐study heterogeneity is estimated imprecisely. A Bayesian approach to estimation allows external evidence on the expected magnitude of heterogeneity to be incorporated. The aim of this paper is to provide tools that improve the accessibility of Bayesian meta‐analysis. We present two methods for implementing Bayesian meta‐analysis, using numerical integration and importance sampling techniques. Based on 14 886 binary outcome meta‐analyses in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, we derive a novel set of predictive distributions for the degree of heterogeneity expected in 80 settings depending on the outcomes assessed and comparisons made. These can be used as prior distributions for heterogeneity in future meta‐analyses. The two methods are implemented in R, for which code is provided. Both methods produce equivalent results to standard but more complex Markov chain Monte Carlo approaches. The priors are derived as log‐normal distributions for the between‐study variance, applicable to meta‐analyses of binary outcomes on the log odds‐ratio scale. The methods are applied to two example meta‐analyses, incorporating the relevant predictive distributions as prior distributions for between‐study heterogeneity. We have provided resources to facilitate Bayesian meta‐analysis, in a form accessible to applied researchers, which allow relevant prior information on the degree of heterogeneity to be incorporated. © 2014 The Authors. Statistics in Medicine published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Keywords:meta‐analysis  Bayesian methods  heterogeneity  prior distributions
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