Intended for healthcare professionals

Education And Debate

Measuring inconsistency in meta-analyses

BMJ 2003; 327 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.327.7414.557 (Published 04 September 2003) Cite this as: BMJ 2003;327:557
  1. Julian P T Higgins, statistician (julian.higgins{at}mrc-bsu.cam.ac.uk)1,
  2. Simon G Thompson, director1,
  3. Jonathan J Deeks, senior medical statistician2,
  4. Douglas G Altman, professor of statistics in medicine2
  1. 1MRC Biostatistics Unit, Institute of Public Health, Cambridge CB2 2SR,
  2. 2Cancer Research UK/NHS Centre for Statistics in Medicine, Institute of Health Sciences, Oxford OX3 7LF
  1. Correspondence to: J P T Higgins

    Cochrane Reviews have recently started including the quantity I2 to help readers assess the consistency of the results of studies in meta-analyses. What does this new quantity mean, and why is assessment of heterogeneity so important to clinical practice?

    Systematic reviews and meta-analyses can provide convincing and reliable evidence relevant to many aspects of medicine and health care.1 Their value is especially clear when the results of the studies they include show clinically important effects of similar magnitude. However, the conclusions are less clear when the included studies have differing results. In an attempt to establish whether studies are consistent, reports of meta-analyses commonly present a statistical test of heterogeneity. The test seeks to determine whether there are genuine differences underlying the results of the studies (heterogeneity), or whether the variation in findings is compatible with chance alone (homogeneity). However, the test is susceptible to the number of trials included in the meta-analysis. We have developed a new quantity, I2, which we believe gives a better measure of the consistency between trials in a meta-analysis.

    Need for consistency

    Assessment of the consistency of effects across studies is an essential part of meta-analysis. Unless we know how consistent the results of studies are, we cannot determine the generalisability of the findings of the meta-analysis. Indeed, several hierarchical systems for grading evidence state that the results of studies must be consistent or homogeneous to obtain the highest grading.24

    Tests for heterogeneity are commonly used to decide on methods for combining studies and for concluding consistency or inconsistency of findings.5 6 But what does the test achieve in practice, and how should the resulting P values be interpreted?

    Testing for heterogeneity

    A test for heterogeneity examines the null hypothesis that all studies are evaluating the same effect. The usual test statistic (Cochran's Q) is computed by summing the squared deviations of each study's estimate from the overall meta-analytic estimate, weighting each study's contribution in the same manner as in the meta-analysis.7 P values are obtained by comparing the statistic with a χ2 distribution with k-1 degrees of freedom (where k is the number of studies).

    The test is known to be poor at detecting true heterogeneity among studies as significant. Meta-analyses often include small numbers of studies,6 8 and the power of the test in such circumstances is low.9 10 For example, consider the meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials of amantadine for preventing influenza (fig 1). 11 The treatment effects in the eight trials seem inconsistent: the reduction in odds vary from 16% to 93%, with some of the confidence intervals not overlapping. But the test of heterogeneity yields a P value of 0.09, conventionally interpreted as being non-significant. Because the test is poor at detecting true heterogeneity, a non-significant result cannot be taken as evidence of homogeneity. Using a cut-off of 10% for significance12 ameliorates this problem but increases the risk of drawing a false positive conclusion (type I error).10

    Fig 1
    Fig 1

    Eight trials of amantadine for prevention of influenza.11 Outcome is cases of influenza. Summary odds ratios calculated with random effects method

    Conversely, the test arguably has excessive power when there are many studies, especially when those studies are large. One of the largest meta-analyses in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews is of clinical trials of tricyclic antidepressants and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors for treatment of depression.13 Over 15 000 participants from 135 trials are included in the assessment of comparative drop-out rates, and the test for heterogeneity is significant (P = 0.005). However, this P value does not reasonably describe the extent of heterogeneity in the results of the trials. As we show later, a little inconsistency exists among these trials but it does not affect the conclusion of the review (that serotonin reuptake inhibitors have lower discontinuation rates than tricyclic antidepressants).

    Since systematic reviews bring together studies that are diverse both clinically and methodologically, heterogeneity in their results is to be expected.6 For example, heterogeneity is likely to arise through diversity in doses, lengths of follow up, study quality, and inclusion criteria for participants. So there seems little point in simply testing for heterogeneity when what matters is the extent to which it affects the conclusions of the meta-analysis.

    Quantifying heterogeneity: a better approach

    We developed an alternative approach that quantifies the effect of heterogeneity, providing a measure of the degree of inconsistency in the studies' results.14 The quantity, which we call I2, describes the percentage of total variation across studies that is due to heterogeneity rather than chance. I2 can be readily calculated from basic results obtained from a typical meta-analysis as I2 = 100% x(Q - df)/Q, where Q is Cochran's heterogeneity statistic and df the degrees of freedom. Negative values of I2 are put equal to zero so that I2 lies between 0% and 100%. A value of 0% indicates no observed heterogeneity, and larger values show increasing heterogeneity.

    Examples of values of I2

    The principal advantage of I2 is that it can be calculated and compared across meta-analyses of different sizes, of different types of study, and using different types of outcome data. Table 1 gives I2 values for six published meta-analyses along with 95% uncertainty intervals. The upper limits of these intervals show that conclusions of homogeneity in meta-analyses of small numbers of studies are often unjustified.11 13 1519

    Table 1

    Heterogeneity statistics for examples of meta-analyses from the literature. Meta-analyses were conducted using either meta or metan in STATA15

    View this table:

    The tamoxifen and streptokinase meta-analyses, in which all the included studies found similar effects,16 17 have I2 values of 3% and 19% respectively. These indicate little variability between studies that cannot be explained by chance. For the review comparing drop-outs on selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors with tricyclic antidepressants, I2 is 26%, indicating that although the heterogeneity is highly significant, it is a small effect.

    The reviews of trials of magnesium after myocardial infarction (I2 = 63%) and case-control studies investigating the effects of electromagnetic radiation on leukaemia (69%) both included studies with diverse results. The high I2 values show that most of the variability across studies is due to heterogeneity rather than chance. Although no significant heterogeneity was detected in the review of amantadine,11 the inconsistency was moderately large (I2 = 44%).

    Figure 2 shows the observed values of I2 from 509 meta-analyses in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. Almost half of these meta-analyses (250) had no inconsistency (I2 = 0%). Among meta-analyses with some heterogeneity, the distribution of I2 is roughly flat.

    Fig 2
    Fig 2

    Distribution of observed values of I2 based on odds ratios from 509 meta-analyses of dichotomous outcomes in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. Data are from the first subgroup (if any) in the first meta-analysis (if any) in each review, if it involved a dichotomous outcome and at least two trials with events. Meta-analyses conducted with metan in STATA15

    Further applications of I2

    I2 can also be helpful in investigating the causes and type of heterogeneity, as in the three examples below.

    Methodological subgroups

    Figure 3 shows the six case-control studies of magnetic fields and leukaemia broken down into two subgroups based on assessment of their quality.19 If heterogeneity is identified in a meta-analysis a common option is to subgroup the studies. Because of loss of power, non-significant heterogeneity within a subgroup may be due not to homogeneity but to the smaller number of studies. Here, the P values for the heterogeneity test are higher for the two subgroups (P = 0.3 and P = 0.009) than for the complete data (P = 0.007), which suggests greater consistency within the subgroups. However, the values of I2 show that the three low quality studies are more inconsistent (I2 = 79%) than all six (I2 = 69%) (table 2). Substantially less inconsistency exists among the high quality studies (I2 = 15%), although uncertainty intervals for all of the I2 values are wide.

    Fig 3
    Fig 3

    Meta-analyses of six case-control studies relating residential exposure to electromagnetic fields to childhood leukaemia.19 Summary odds ratio calculated by random effects method

    Table 2

    More advanced applications of l2 for assessing heterogeneity in three published meta-analyses. Meta-analyses were conducted with either meta or metan in STATA1515

    View this table:

    Heterogeneity related to choice of effect measure

    A systematic review of clinical trials of human albumin administration in critically ill patients concluded that albumin may increase mortality.20 These studies had no inconsistency in risk ratio estimates (I2 = 0%) and a narrow uncertainty interval. Table 2 shows the heterogeneity statistics for risk differences as well as for risk ratios. Six trials with no deaths in either treatment group do not contribute information on risk ratios, but they all provide estimates of risk differences. Using P values to decide which scale is more consistent with the data21 is inappropriate because of the differing numbers of studies. I2 values may validly be compared and show that the risk differences are less homogeneous, as is often the case.22

    Clinically important subgroups

    I2 can also be used to describe heterogeneity among subgroups. Table 2 includes results for the outcome of recurrence in the meta-analysis of trials of tamoxifen for women with early breast cancer. There was highly significant (P = 0.00002) and important heterogeneity (I2 = 50%) among the trials.16 However, a potentially important source of heterogeneity is the duration of treatment. The authors divided the trials into three duration categories and presented an overall heterogeneity test, a test comparing the three subgroups, and a test for heterogeneity within the subgroups. I2 values corresponding to each test show that 96% of the variability observed among the three subgroups cannot be explained by chance. This is not clear from the P values alone. The extreme inconsistency among all 55 trials in the odds ratios for recurrence (I2 = 50%) is substantially reduced (I2 = 13%) once differences in treatment duration are accounted for.

    How much is too much heterogeneity?

    A naive categorisation of values for I2 would not be appropriate for all circumstances, although we would tentatively assign adjectives of low, moderate, and high to I2 values of 25%, 50%, and 75%. Figure 2 shows that about a quarter of meta-analyses have I2 values over 50%. Quantification of heterogeneity is only one component of a wider investigation of variability across studies, the most important being diversity in clinical and methodological aspects. Meta-analysts must also consider the clinical implications of the observed degree of inconsistency across studies. For example, interpretation of a given degree of heterogeneity across several studies will differ according to whether the estimates show the same direction of effect.

    Advantages ofI2

    • Focuses attention on the effect of any heterogeneity on the meta-analysis

    • Interpretation is intuitive—the percentage of total variation across studies due to heterogeneity

    • Can be accompanied by an uncertainty interval

    • Simple to calculate and can usually be derived from published meta-analyses

    • Does not inherently depend on the number of studies in the meta-analysis

    • May be interpreted similarly irrespective of the type of outcome data (eg dichotomous, quantitative, or time to event) and choice of effect measure (eg odds ratio or hazard ratio)

    • Wide range of applications

    Summary points

    • Inconsistency of studies' results in a meta-analysis reduces the confidence of recommendations about treatment

    • Inconsistency is usually assessed with a test for heterogeneity, but problems of power can give misleading results

    • A new quantity I2, ranging from 0-100%, is described that measures the degree of inconsistency across studies in a meta-analysis

    • I2 can be directly compared between meta-analyses with different numbers of studies and different types of outcome data

    • I2 is preferable to a test for heterogeneity in judging consistency of evidence

    An alternative quantification of heterogeneity in a meta-analysis is the among-study variance (often called τ2), calculated as part of a random effects meta-analysis. This is more useful for comparisons of heterogeneity among subgroups, but values depend on the treatment effect scale. We believe, I2 offers advantages over existing approaches to the assessment of heterogeneity (box). Focusing on the effect of heterogeneity also avoids the temptation to perform so called two stage analyses, in which the meta-analysis strategy (fixed or random effects method) is determined by the result of a statistical test. Such strategies have been found to be problematic.23 24 We therefore believe that I2 is preferable to the test of heterogeneity when assessing inconsistency across studies.

    Acknowledgments

    We thank Keith O'Rourke and Ian White for useful comments.

    Footnotes

    • Contributors The authors all work as statisticians and have extensive experience in methodological, empirical and applied research in meta-analysis. JH, JD, and DA are coconvenors of the Cochrane Statistical Methods Group. The views expressed in the paper are those of the authors. All authors contributed to the development of the methods described. JH and ST worked more closely on the development of I2. JH is guarantor.

    • Funding This work was funded in part by MRC

    • Competing interests None declared

    References

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