Duke University, Department of Evolutionary Anthropology, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
J Int Soc Sports Nutr. 2024 Dec;21(1):2413668. doi: 10.1080/15502783.2024.2413668. Epub 2024 Oct 7.
Han et al. (J Int Soc Sports Nutr 16:55, 2019) sought to quantify the effects of vitamin D supplementation on strength outcomes among athletes in a meta-analysis. The authors reported a pooled effect size (standardized mean difference; SMD) of -0.75 (95% CI: -1.82 to 0.32, p = 0.17) in favor of supplementation, but the analytical approach was not appropriate for a pooled analysis of randomized controlled trials and the effect sizes were calculated incorrectly. This letter discusses how these issues impact the results and interpretation of the paper, then provides an update on the estimated average effect of vitamin D on strength outcomes in athletes.
Identified errors included the use of within-group rather than between-group effect size metrics, the use of standard error values in place of standard deviations, and failure to account for correlated observations within the model. The data were reanalyzed after correcting for these common meta-analytic errors.
The results of this reanalysis reflect a dramatically smaller and statistically nonsignificant pooled effect estimate of SMD = 0.16 (-0.24 to 0.56, p = 0.43) in favor of supplementation. Further, the model from this reanalysis has more favorable statistical characteristics than the original analysis, as evidenced by a fairly symmetrical funnel plot and a nonsignificant result for Cochrane's Q test (Q = 5.02, p = 0.41).
In order to disseminate robust information to sports nutrition practitioners and researchers, it is critically important for meta-analyses to produce valid effect estimates that are appropriate for the underlying study designs and calculated without error. This letter highlights common errors to inform the calculation and interpretation of future meta-analyses in sports nutrition.
韩等人(J Int Soc Sports Nutr 16:55, 2019)在一项荟萃分析中试图量化维生素 D 补充剂对运动员力量表现的影响。作者报告了支持补充剂的汇总效应大小(标准化均数差;SMD)为-0.75(95%置信区间:-1.82 至 0.32,p = 0.17),但分析方法不适用于随机对照试验的汇总分析,且效应大小的计算有误。这封信讨论了这些问题如何影响论文的结果和解释,然后提供了关于维生素 D 对运动员力量表现的估计平均效应的最新信息。
确定的错误包括使用组内而不是组间效应大小指标、使用标准误差值而不是标准差,以及在模型中未考虑相关观察值。在纠正这些常见的荟萃分析错误后,重新分析了这些数据。
该重新分析的结果反映了一个小得多且统计学上无显著性的汇总效应估计值 SMD = 0.16(-0.24 至 0.56,p = 0.43),支持补充剂。此外,与原始分析相比,该重新分析的模型具有更有利的统计特征,表现为相当对称的漏斗图和 Cochrane's Q 检验(Q = 5.02,p = 0.41)的非显著性结果。
为了向运动营养从业者和研究人员传播可靠的信息,荟萃分析必须产生适合基础研究设计且无错误计算的有效效应估计值,这一点至关重要。这封信强调了常见的错误,以告知未来运动营养荟萃分析的计算和解释。