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Meta-Analysis of Odds Ratios from Heterogeneous Clinical Studies and Its Shortcomings
Mina Song
The University of Texas at San Antonio
Macy Belle
The University of Texas at San Antonio
David Han
The University of Texas at San Antonio
Many systematic reviews of randomized clinical trials require meta-analyses of odds ratios. A conventional method estimate the overall odds ratios via weighted averages of the logarithm of individual odds ratios. However, this approach has several deficiencies due to the underlying assumptions and approximations. The goal of this study is to understand and quantify the methodological pitfalls in conducting a meta-analysis of odds ratios. The fixed-effect and random-effect models of pooled odds ratios are compared by applying to a meta-analysis of SNP studies. A popular statistical software R is used for the analysis. The point estimates and confidence intervals for the overall log odds ratio can differ substantially between the traditional and alternative methods, which would affect the resulting statistical inferences. For producing reliable results, the traditional methods for meta-analysis of odds ratios should be discouraged.