Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/24999
Title: Beta-binomial analysis of variance model for network meta-analysis of diagnostic test accuracy data
Authors: NYAGA, Victoria 
Arbyn, Marc
AERTS, Marc 
Issue Date: 2016
Source: Statistical methods in medical research, 27 (8), p. 2554-2566
Abstract: There are several generalized linear mixed models to combine direct and indirect evidence on several diagnostic tests from related but independent diagnostic studies simultaneously also known as network meta-analysis. The popularity of these models is due to the attractive features of the normal distribution and the availability of statistical software to obtain parameter estimates. However, modeling the latent sensitivity and specificity using the normal distribution after transformation is neither natural nor computationally convenient. In this article, we develop a meta-analytic model based on the bivariate beta distribution, allowing to obtain improved and direct estimates for the global sensitivities and specificities of all tests involved, and taking into account simultaneously the intrinsic correlation between sensitivity and specificity and the overdispersion due to repeated measures. Using the beta distribution in regression has the following advantages, that the probabilities are modeled in their proper scale rather than a monotonic transform of the probabilities. Secondly, the model is flexible as it allows for asymmetry often present in the distribution of bounded variables such as proportions, which is the case with sparse data common in meta-analysis. Thirdly, the model provides parameters with direct meaningful interpretation since further integration is not necessary to obtain the meta-analytic estimates.
Notes: Arbyn, M (reprint author), Belgian Canc Ctr, Sci Inst Publ Hlth, Canc Epidemiol Unit, Brussels, Belgium. marc.arbyn@wiv-isp.be
Keywords: network meta-analysis; diagnostic studies; generalized linear mixed models; beta distribution; proportions; meta-analysis
Document URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/24999
ISSN: 0962-2802
e-ISSN: 1477-0334
DOI: 10.1177/0962280216682532
ISI #: 000438616300021
Rights: (c) The Author(s) 2016
Category: A1
Type: Journal Contribution
Validations: ecoom 2019
Appears in Collections:Research publications

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