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What is a multiple treatments meta-analysis?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 January 2012

A. Cipriani*
Affiliation:
Department of Public Health and Community Medicine, Section of Psychiatry and Clinical Psychology, University of Verona, Italy
C. Barbui
Affiliation:
Department of Public Health and Community Medicine, Section of Psychiatry and Clinical Psychology, University of Verona, Italy
C. Rizzo
Affiliation:
Department of Public Health and Community Medicine, Section of Psychiatry and Clinical Psychology, University of Verona, Italy
G. Salanti
Affiliation:
Department of Hygiene and Epidemiology, University of Ioannina School of Medicine, Ioannina, Greece
*
*Address for correspondence: Andrea Cipriani, Department of Public Health and Community Medicine, Section of Psychiatry and Clinical Psychology, University of Verona, Piazzale L.A. Scuro 10, 37134 Verona, Italy. (Email: andrea.cipriani@univr.it)
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Abstract

Standard meta-analyses are an effective tool in evidence-based medicine, but one of their main drawbacks is that they can compare only two alternative treatments at a time. Moreover, if no trials exist which directly compare two interventions, it is not possible to estimate their relative efficacy. Multiple treatments meta-analyses use a meta-analytical technique that allows the incorporation of evidence from both direct and indirect comparisons from a network of trials of different interventions to estimate summary treatment effects as comprehensively and precisely as possible.

Information

Type
ABC of Methodology
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2012
Figure 0

Fig. 1. Graphic explanation of direct–indirect comparisons to be used in MTM (see text).