Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11960/3543
Title: The perils of misinterpreting and misusing publication bias in meta-analyses
Other Titles: an education review on funnel plot-based methods
Authors: Afonso, José
Ramirez-Campillo, Rodrigo
Clemente, Filipe Manuel
Cléirigh Büttner, Fionn
Andrade, Renato
Issue Date: 8-Sep-2023
Citation: Afonso, J., Ramirez-Campillo, R., Clemente, F.M., Cléirigh Büttner, F. & Andrade, R.(2023). The perils of misinterpreting and misusing: an education review on funnel plot-based methods publication bias in meta-analyses. Sports Medicine. Doi: 10.1007/s40279-023-01927-9
Abstract: Publication bias refers to a systematic deviation from the truth in the results of a meta-analysis due to the higher likelihood for published studies to be included in meta-analyses than unpublished studies. Publication bias can lead to misleading recommendations for decision and policy making. In this education review, we introduce, explain, and provide solutions to the pervasive misuses and misinterpretations of publication bias that afict evidence syntheses in sport and exercise medicine, with a focus on the commonly used funnel-plot based methods. Publication bias is more routinely assessed by visually inspecting funnel plot asymmetry, although it has been consistently deemed unreliable, leading to the development of statistical tests to assess publication bias. However, most statistical tests of publication bias (i) cannot rule out alternative explanations for funnel plot asymmetry (e.g., between-study heterogeneity, choice of metric, chance) and (ii) are grossly underpowered, even when using an arbitrary minimum threshold of ten or more studies. We performed a cross-sectional meta-research investigation of how publication bias was assessed in systematic reviews with meta-analyses published in the top two sport and exercise medicine journals throughout 2021. This analysis highlights that publication bias is frequently misused and misinterpreted, even in top tier journals. Because of conceptual and methodological problems when assessing and interpreting publication bias, preventive strategies (e.g., pre-registration, registered reports, disclosing protocol deviations, and reporting all study fndings regardless of direction or magnitude) ofer the best and most efcient solution to mitigate the misuse and misinterpretation of publication bias. Because true publication bias is very difcult to determine, we recommend that future publications use the term “risk of publication bias”.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11960/3543
ISSN: 1179-2035 (online)
0112-1642
Appears in Collections:ESDL - Artigos indexados à WoS/Scopus

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