14. Reporting bias assessment
Describe any methods used to assess risk of bias due to missing results in a synthesis (arising from reporting biases)
Essential elements
Specify the methods (tool, graphical, statistical, or other) used to assess the risk of bias due to missing results in a synthesis (arising from reporting biases).
If risk of bias due to missing results was assessed using an existing tool, specify the methodological components/domains/items of the tool, and the process used to reach a judgment of overall risk of bias.
If any adaptations to an existing tool to assess risk of bias due to missing results were made (such as omitting or modifying items), specify the adaptations.
If a new tool to assess risk of bias due to missing results was developed for use in the review, describe the content of the tool and make it publicly accessible.
Report how many reviewers assessed risk of bias due to missing results in a synthesis, whether multiple reviewers worked independently, and any processes used to resolve disagreements between assessors.
Report any processes used to obtain or confirm relevant information from study investigators.
If an automation tool was used to assess risk of bias due to missing results, report how the tool was used, how the tool was trained, and details on the tool’s performance and internal validation.
Explanation
The validity of a synthesis may be threatened when the available results differ systematically from the missing results. This is known as “bias due to missing results” and arises from “reporting biases” such as selective non-publication and selective non-reporting of results (see item 11 – risk of bias assessment#risk-of-bias).1 Direct methods for assessing the risk of bias due to missing results include comparing outcomes and analyses pre-specified in study registers, protocols, and statistical analysis plans with results that were available in study reports. Statistical and graphical methods exist to assess whether the observed data suggest potential for missing results (such as contour enhanced funnel plots, Egger’s test) and how robust the synthesis is to different assumptions about the nature of potentially missing results (such as selection models).23 45 Tools (such as checklists, scales, or domain-based tools) that prompt users to consider some or all of these approaches are available.12 Therefore, reporting methods (tools, graphical, statistical, or other) used to assess risk of bias due to missing results is recommended so that readers are able to assess how appropriate the methods were. The process by which assessments were conducted should also be reported to enable readers to assess the potential for errors and facilitate replicability.
Example
“To assess small-study effects, we planned to generate funnel plots for meta-analyses including at least 10 trials of varying size. If asymmetry in the funnel plot was detected, we planned to review the characteristics of the trials to assess whether the asymmetry was likely due to publication bias or other factors such as methodological or clinical heterogeneity of the trials. To assess outcome reporting bias, we compared the outcomes specified in trial protocols with the outcomes reported in the corresponding trial publications; if trial protocols were unavailable, we compared the outcomes reported in the methods and results sections of the trial publications.”6
Training
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