Interdisciplinary Center Psychopathology and Emotion Regulation, Department of Psychiatry, University of Groningen, University Medical Center Groningen, Groningen, the Netherlands.
College of Pharmacy, Oregon State and Oregon Health and Science University, Portland.
JAMA Psychiatry. 2015 May;72(5):500-10. doi: 10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2015.15.
Studies have shown that the scientific literature has overestimated the efficacy of antidepressants for depression, but other indications for these drugs have not been considered.
To examine reporting biases in double-blind, placebo-controlled trials on the pharmacologic treatment of anxiety disorders and quantify the extent to which these biases inflate estimates of drug efficacy.
We included reviews obtained from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for premarketing trials of 9 second-generation antidepressants in the treatment of anxiety disorders. A systematic search for matching publications (until December 19, 2012) was performed using PubMed, EMBASE, and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials.
Double data extraction was performed for the FDA reviews and the journal articles. The Hedges g value was calculated as the measure of effect size.
Reporting bias was examined and classified as study publication bias, outcome reporting bias, or spin (abstract conclusion not consistent with published results on primary end point). Separate meta-analyses were conducted for the 2 sources, and the effect of publication status on the effect estimates was examined using meta-regression.
The findings of 41 of the 57 trials (72%) were positive according to the FDA, but 43 of the 45 published article conclusions (96%) were positive (P < .001). Trials that the FDA determined as positive were 5 times more likely to be published in agreement with that determination compared with trials determined as not positive (risk ratio, 5.20; 95% CI, 1.87 to 14.45; P < .001). We found evidence for study publication bias (P < .001), outcome reporting bias (P = .02), and spin (P = .02). The pooled effect size based on the published literature (Hedges g, 0.38; 95% CI, 0.33 to 0.42; P < .001) was 15% higher than the effect size based on the FDA data (Hedges g, 0.33; 95% CI, 0.29 to 0.38; P < .001), but this difference was not statistically significant (β = 0.04; 95% CI, -0.02 to 0.10; P = .18).
Various reporting biases were present for trials on the efficacy of FDA-approved second-generation antidepressants for anxiety disorders. Although these biases did not significantly inflate estimates of drug efficacy, reporting biases led to significant increases in the number of positive findings in the literature.
研究表明,科学文献高估了抗抑郁药治疗抑郁症的疗效,但尚未考虑这些药物的其他适应证。
考察在双盲、安慰剂对照的焦虑障碍药物治疗试验中是否存在报告偏倚,并量化这些偏倚对药物疗效估计的影响程度。
我们纳入了美国食品和药物管理局(FDA)对 9 种第二代抗抑郁药治疗焦虑障碍的上市前试验的综述。使用 PubMed、EMBASE 和 Cochrane 对照试验中心注册库,进行了系统的检索,以寻找匹配的出版物(截至 2012 年 12 月 19 日)。
对 FDA 综述和期刊文章进行了双重数据提取。Hedges g 值被计算为效应量的衡量标准。
检查了报告偏倚,并将其分类为研究发表偏倚、结果报告偏倚或歪曲(摘要结论与主要终点的已发表结果不一致)。对这两个来源分别进行了荟萃分析,并使用荟萃回归检查了发表状态对效应估计的影响。
根据 FDA 的标准,57 项试验中的 41 项(72%)结果为阳性,但 45 项已发表文章的结论中有 43 项(96%)为阳性(P < 0.001)。与被 FDA 判定为非阳性的试验相比,被 FDA 判定为阳性的试验更有可能发表与该判定一致的结果(风险比,5.20;95%CI,1.87 至 14.45;P < 0.001)。我们发现存在研究发表偏倚(P < 0.001)、结果报告偏倚(P = 0.02)和歪曲(P = 0.02)的证据。基于已发表文献的汇总效应大小(Hedges g,0.38;95%CI,0.33 至 0.42;P < 0.001)比基于 FDA 数据的效应大小高 15%(Hedges g,0.33;95%CI,0.29 至 0.38;P < 0.001),但这一差异无统计学意义(β = 0.04;95%CI,-0.02 至 0.10;P = 0.18)。
在针对 FDA 批准的第二代抗抑郁药治疗焦虑障碍的疗效的试验中,存在各种报告偏倚。尽管这些偏倚没有显著夸大药物疗效的估计值,但报告偏倚导致文献中阳性结果的数量显著增加。