Systematic reviews of treatments for mental health disorders should be exploited in order to obtain accurate information about efficacy of current interventions, and to use existing data to plan future clinical trials. Most systematic reviews result a graphical networks of multivariate, multi-arm data, often with up to 50% missing outcomes. Missing clinical trial outcomes are frequently a result of outcome reporting bias (ORB), in which outcomes are unreported based on observed level of significance. Such bias causes pooled meta-analytic effect sizes to be biased. To obtain unbiased and precise network meta-analytic effect sizes, networks should be jointly analyzed using a multivariate network meta-analytic (MNMA) framework, which has not yet been proposed. Under a Bayesian paradigm powered by Markov chain Monte Carlo tools, the methods described in this proposal will exploit outcome correlation and mitigate effects of ORB via the development of the MNMA model, resulting in less biased and more precise pairwise estimates of treatment effects (even for treatments that have been weakly or never-compared). Based on these results, predictive distributions will be used to inform operating characteristics of new clinical trials. Goals: Multivariate NMA will be developed and apply it to 3 case studies: systematic reviews of randomized controlled trials of second-generation anti-depressants for the treatment of adult, adolescent, and older adult major depressive disorder, respectively, for which outcomes have been already shown to be subject to reporting bias. Comparisons with univariate NMA methods will be made. A methodology for future trial design will be developed utilizing Bayesian predictive inference informed by the multivariate network. This approach would refine power and sample size calculations resulting in optimally-powered and more efficient trials for weakly- or never-tested treatments. Software will be completely generalizable to networks arising from all clinical disciplines and will be disseminated freely.

Public Health Relevance

) The proposed research has the potential to exert substantial impact on mental health disorders from a public health perspective. First, statistical methods to make efficient use of systematic reviews in mental health that report multiple outcomes are needed. Further, by utilizing the complex network of information contained in systematic reviews, the methods will promote efficient and appropriately powered clinical trials for weakly tested interventions. Ultimately, mental health researchers will have a more precise understanding about treatment effects both for immediate application, and for designing appropriately powered studies in the future. The methods developed here will be tested on at least 3 different data sets, are fully generalizable to other clinical and public health disciplines, and will be disseminated to mental health researchers.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Type
Exploratory/Developmental Grants (R21)
Project #
1R21MH110110-01A1
Application #
9243340
Study Section
Mental Health Services Research Committee (SERV)
Program Officer
Rupp, Agnes
Project Start
2016-12-06
Project End
2018-11-30
Budget Start
2016-12-06
Budget End
2017-11-30
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2017
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Texas Health Science Center Houston
Department
Biostatistics & Other Math Sci
Type
Schools of Public Health
DUNS #
800771594
City
Houston
State
TX
Country
United States
Zip Code
77030
Liu, Yulun; DeSantis, Stacia M; Chen, Yong (2018) Bayesian mixed treatment comparisons meta-analysis for correlated outcomes subject to reporting bias. J R Stat Soc Ser C Appl Stat 67:127-144