Hi all,
I am conducting a meta-analysis of prevalence of a vaccine side effect (let's say fever) within a specific group of people. The data I have collected include prevalence of fever after different vaccinations of the same vaccine (1st dose, 2nd dose etc). Of course, those data are paired, but I treated them as independent and included all the studies in one analysis because it is important for my study to measure the overall prevalence of fever after all vaccinations.
However, I conducted subgroup analysis to explore for between-study heterogeneity and as expected there was significant heterogeneity between the dose-subgroups. As Cochrane Q statistic is the test used in subgroup analysis to compare differences in effect sizes, my question is if this a proper test to be used when the data are paired.
Thanks for your help.
I am conducting a meta-analysis of prevalence of a vaccine side effect (let's say fever) within a specific group of people. The data I have collected include prevalence of fever after different vaccinations of the same vaccine (1st dose, 2nd dose etc). Of course, those data are paired, but I treated them as independent and included all the studies in one analysis because it is important for my study to measure the overall prevalence of fever after all vaccinations.
However, I conducted subgroup analysis to explore for between-study heterogeneity and as expected there was significant heterogeneity between the dose-subgroups. As Cochrane Q statistic is the test used in subgroup analysis to compare differences in effect sizes, my question is if this a proper test to be used when the data are paired.
Thanks for your help.
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