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Data visualisation approaches for component network meta-analysis: visualising the data structure

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Version 2 2023-12-15, 14:33
Version 1 2023-09-14, 09:41
journal contribution
posted on 2023-12-15, 14:33 authored by Suzanne Freeman, Elnaz Saeedi, Jose Ordonez-Mena, Clareece Nevill, Jamie Hartmann-Boyce, Deborah Caldwell, Nicky Welton, Nicola Cooper, Alex Sutton

Background

Health and social care interventions are often complex and can be decomposed into multiple components. Multicomponent interventions are often evaluated in randomised controlled trials. Across trials, interventions often have components in common which are given alongside other components which differ across trials. Multicomponent interventions can be synthesised using component NMA (CNMA). CNMA is limited by the structure of the available evidence, but it is not always straightforward to visualise such complex evidence networks. The aim of this paper is to develop tools to visualise the structure of complex evidence networks to support CNMA.


Methods

We performed a citation review of two key CNMA methods papers to identify existing published CNMA analyses and reviewed how they graphically represent intervention complexity and comparisons across trials. Building on identified shortcomings of existing visualisation approaches, we propose three approaches to standardise visualising the data structure and/or availability of data: CNMA-UpSet plot, CNMA heat map, CNMA-circle plot. We use a motivating example to illustrate these plots.


Results

We identified 34 articles reporting CNMAs. A network diagram was the most common plot type used to visualise the data structure for CNMA (26/34 papers), but was unable to express the complex data structures and large number of components and potential combinations of components associated with CNMA. Therefore, we focused visualisation development around representing the data structure of a CNMA more completely. The CNMA-UpSet plot presents arm-level data and is suitable for networks with large numbers of components or combinations of components. Heat maps can be utilised to inform decisions about which pairwise interactions to consider for inclusion in a CNMA model. The CNMA-circle plot visualises the combinations of components which differ between trial arms and offers flexibility in presenting additional information such as the number of patients experiencing the outcome of interest in each arm.


Conclusions

As CNMA becomes more widely used for the evaluation of multicomponent interventions, the novel CNMA-specific visualisations presented in this paper, which improve on the limitations of existing visualisations, will be important to aid understanding of the complex data structure and facilitate interpretation of the CNMA results.

Funding

National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Complex Reviews Support Unit (CRSU)

NIHR Applied Research Collaboration East Midlands (ARC EM) and Leicester Biomedical Research Centre (BRC)

History

Author affiliation

Department of Population Health Sciences, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

BMC Medical Research Methodology

Volume

23

Issue

208

Publisher

BMC

issn

1471-2288

Copyright date

2023

Available date

2023-12-15

Language

en

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