DEPERROR: Risks of systematic errors in drug and non-drug randomized clinical trials assessing intervention effects in patients with unipolar depression
Research output: Contribution to journal › Review › Research › peer-review
BACKGROUND: Systematic errors in randomized clinical trials (RCTs) overestimate treatment effects. We systematically assessed the risks of bias in RCTs assessing the effects of drug and non-drug interventions for patients with unipolar depression.
METHODS: We searched bibliographic databases for drug and non-drug RCTs including patients with depression. We assessed the following risk of bias domains: sequence generation, allocation concealment, baseline imbalance, blinding, intention-to-treat analysis, selective outcome reporting, and funding. Risks of bias were compared for drug and non-drug trials and according to year of publication (before 1990; from 1990 to 1999; and 2000 to 2010).
RESULTS: Comparing drug trials (N=775) to non-drug trials (N=73), the proportion of drug trials with low risk of bias seemed superior regarding blinding of participants (p<0.001), blinding of health-care providers (p<0.001), and blinded outcome assessment (p<0.001). Non-drug trials were superior regarding sequence generation (p<0.001), allocation concealment (p=0.002), intention-to-treat analysis (p<0.001), and baseline imbalance (p=0.006). Adequate blinding of data managers (p=0.45), blinding of statisticians (p=0.69), and selective outcome reporting (p=0.55) did not differ. 41.5% of drug trials were funded by for-profit organizations compared to 12.3% of non-drug trials (p<0.001). In drug trials, the risk of bias decreased significantly over time. This did not reach statistical significance in non-drug trials.
LIMITATIONS: This study only included trials published before 2010.
CONCLUSIONS: Included trials were associated with high risks of bias which may distort effect estimates. The risks of bias decreased with time for drug trials.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Journal of Affective Disorders |
Volume | 179 |
Pages (from-to) | 121-127 |
Number of pages | 7 |
ISSN | 0165-0327 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 Jul 2015 |
- Bias (Epidemiology), Depression, Humans, Outcome Assessment (Health Care), Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Research Design, Risk
Research areas
ID: 156345014