BMC Medical Research Methodology (Mar 2022)

Implications of analysing time-to-event outcomes as binary in meta-analysis: empirical evidence from the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews

  • Theodosia Salika,
  • Rebecca M. Turner,
  • David Fisher,
  • Jayne F. Tierney,
  • Ian R. White

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12874-022-01541-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Background Systematic reviews and meta-analysis of time-to-event outcomes are frequently published within the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (CDSR). However, these outcomes are handled differently across meta-analyses. They can be analysed on the hazard ratio (HR) scale or can be dichotomized and analysed as binary outcomes using effect measures such as odds ratios (OR) or risk ratios (RR). We investigated the impact of reanalysing meta-analyses from the CDSR that used these different effect measures. Methods We extracted two types of meta-analysis data from the CDSR: either recorded in a binary form only (“binary”), or in binary form together with observed minus expected and variance statistics (“OEV”). We explored how results for time-to-event outcomes originally analysed as “binary” change when analysed using the complementary log–log (clog-log) link on a HR scale. For the data originally analysed as HRs (“OEV”), we compared these results to analysing them as binary on a HR scale using the clog-log link or using a logit link on an OR scale. Results The pooled HR estimates were closer to 1 than the OR estimates in the majority of meta-analyses. Important differences in between-study heterogeneity between the HR and OR analyses were also observed. These changes led to discrepant conclusions between the OR and HR scales in some meta-analyses. Situations under which the clog-log link performed better than logit link and vice versa were apparent, indicating that the correct choice of the method does matter. Differences between scales arise mainly when event probability is high and may occur via differences in between-study heterogeneity or via increased within-study standard error in the OR relative to the HR analyses. Conclusions We identified that dichotomising time-to-event outcomes may be adequate for low event probabilities but not for high event probabilities. In meta-analyses where only binary data are available, the complementary log–log link may be a useful alternative when analysing time-to-event outcomes as binary, however the exact conditions need further exploration. These findings provide guidance on the appropriate methodology that should be used when conducting such meta-analyses.

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