A Guide to Estimating the Reference Range From a Meta-Analysis Using Aggregate or Individual Participant Data
Overview
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Clinicians frequently must decide whether a patient's measurement reflects that of a healthy "normal" individual. Thus, the reference range is defined as the interval in which some proportion (frequently 95%) of measurements from a healthy population is expected to fall. One can estimate it from a single study or preferably from a meta-analysis of multiple studies to increase generalizability. This range differs from the confidence interval for the pooled mean and the prediction interval for a new study mean in a meta-analysis, which do not capture natural variation across healthy individuals. Methods for estimating the reference range from a meta-analysis of aggregate data that incorporates both within- and between-study variations were recently proposed. In this guide, we present 3 approaches for estimating the reference range: one frequentist, one Bayesian, and one empirical. Each method can be applied to either aggregate or individual-participant data meta-analysis, with the latter being the gold standard when available. We illustrate the application of these approaches to data from a previously published individual-participant data meta-analysis of studies measuring liver stiffness by transient elastography in healthy individuals between 2006 and 2016.
Estimating reference intervals from an IPD meta-analysis using quantile regression.
Jiang Z, Chu H, Wang Z, Murad M, Siegel L BMC Med Res Methodol. 2024; 24(1):251.
PMID: 39462323 PMC: 11514908. DOI: 10.1186/s12874-024-02378-0.
Siegel L, Chu H Res Synth Methods. 2023; 14(4):639-646.
PMID: 36738156 PMC: 10886429. DOI: 10.1002/jrsm.1624.
RIMeta: An R shiny tool for estimating the reference interval from a meta-analysis.
Jiang Z, Cao W, Chu H, Bazerbachi F, Siegel L Res Synth Methods. 2023; 14(3):468-478.
PMID: 36725922 PMC: 10164051. DOI: 10.1002/jrsm.1626.