社区使用医用口罩预防空气传播呼吸道病毒感染的Meta分析的统计再现性

S. Young, W. Kindzierski
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引用次数: 0

摘要

美国许多州、市和县在冠状病毒(COVID)大流行期间实施了公共口罩令,认为这种干预措施将推迟和减缓疫情高峰,并在很大程度上有利于公共卫生结果。p值图可以深入了解统计模型的假设可能不恰当(不正确)。它可以用于确认、反驳或识别元分析发现和研究主张中的歧义(不确定性)。P值图用于评估社区环境中使用一次性医用(外科)口罩预防空气传播呼吸道病毒感染的荟萃分析研究的统计再现性。评估了2020年1月1日至2022年12月7日期间发表的8项研究(7项荟萃分析,1项系统综述)。基础研究是随机对照试验,其结果为医学诊断或实验室确诊的病毒性(流感或新冠肺炎)疾病。由于意识偏差,自我报告的病毒性疾病结果被排除在评估之外。在六个p值图中,没有观察到医用口罩对预防呼吸道病毒感染有益的证据(五个荟萃分析和一个系统综述)。三项荟萃分析和系统综述中没有益处的研究声明在p值图中重现。另外两项荟萃分析中关于益处的研究声明没有在p值图中重现,这表明这些声明不可重复。由于过度依赖自我报告的结果,没有足够的数据来构建另外两项荟萃分析的p值图。p值图的独立发现表明,对现有随机对照试验的荟萃分析未能证明在社区环境中使用医用口罩预防空气传播的呼吸道病毒感染的益处。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Statistical Reproducibility of Meta-Analysis for Medical Mask Use in Community Settings to Prevent Airborne Respiratory Virus Infection
Many US states, cities, and counties implemented public masking orders during the coronavirus (COVID) pandemic on the notion that this intervention would delay and flatten the epidemic peak and largely benefit public health outcomes. A p-value plot can provide insights into possible inappropriateness (incorrectness) of assumptions of a statistical model. It can be used to confirm, disprove, or identify ambiguity (uncertainty) in a meta-analytic finding and research claim. P-value plotting was used to evaluate statistical reproducibility of meta-analysis studies for disposable medical (surgical) mask use in community settings to prevent airborne respiratory virus infection. Eight studies (seven meta-analysis, one systematic review) published between 1 January 2020 and 7 December 2022 were evaluated. Base studies were randomized control trials with outcomes of medical diagnosis or laboratory-confirmed diagnosis of viral (Influenza or COVID) illness. Self-reported viral illness outcomes were excluded from the evaluation because of awareness bias. No evidence was observed for a medical mask benefit to prevent respiratory virus infection in six p-value plots (five meta-analysis and one systematic review). Research claims of no benefit in three meta-analysis and the systematic review were reproduced in p-value plots. Research claims of a benefit in two other meta-analysis were not reproduced in p-value plots suggesting irreproducibility of these claims. Insufficient data was available to construct p-value plots for two other meta-analysis because of over-reliance on self-reported outcomes. Independent findings of p-value plotting show that meta-analysis of existing randomized control trials fail to demonstrate a benefit of medical mask use in community settings to prevent airborne respiratory virus infection.
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