dat.nielweise2008 {metadat} | R Documentation |
Studies on Anti-Infective-Treated Central Venous Catheters for Prevention of Catheter-Related Bloodstream Infections
Description
Results from 18 studies comparing the risk of catheter-related bloodstream infection when using anti-infective-treated versus standard catheters for total parenteral nutrition or chemotherapy.
Usage
dat.nielweise2008
Format
The data frame contains the following columns:
study | numeric | study number |
authors | character | study authors |
year | numeric | publication year |
x1i | numeric | number of CRBSIs in patients receiving an anti-infective catheter |
t1i | numeric | total number of catheter days for patients receiving an anti-infective catheter |
x2i | numeric | number of CRBSIs in patients receiving a standard catheter |
t2i | numeric | total number of catheter days for patients receiving a standard catheter |
Details
The use of a central venous catheter may lead to a catheter-related bloodstream infection (CRBSI), which in turn increases the risk of morbidity and mortality. Anti-infective-treated catheters have been developed that are meant to reduce the risk of CRBSIs. Niel-Weise et al. (2008) conducted a meta-analysis of studies comparing infection risk when using anti-infective-treated versus standard catheters for total parenteral nutrition or chemotherapy. The results from 9 such studies are included in this dataset.
The dataset was used in the article by Stijnen et al. (2010) to illustrate various generalized linear mixed-effects models for the meta-analysis of incidence rates and incidence rate ratios (see ‘References’).
Concepts
medicine, incidence rates, generalized linear models
Author(s)
Wolfgang Viechtbauer, wvb@metafor-project.org, https://www.metafor-project.org
Source
Niel-Weise, B. S., Stijnen, T., & van den Broek, P. J. (2008). Anti-infective-treated central venous catheters for total parenteral nutrition or chemotherapy: A systematic review. Journal of Hospital Infection, 69(2), 114–123. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhin.2008.02.020
References
Stijnen, T., Hamza, T. H., & Ozdemir, P. (2010). Random effects meta-analysis of event outcome in the framework of the generalized linear mixed model with applications in sparse data. Statistics in Medicine, 29(29), 3046–3067. https://doi.org/10.1002/sim.4040
Examples
### copy data into 'dat' and examine data
dat <- dat.nielweise2008
dat
## Not run:
### load metafor package
library(metafor)
### standard (inverse-variance) random-effects model
res <- rma(measure="IRR", x1i=x1i, t1i=t1i, x2i=x2i, t2i=t2i, data=dat)
print(res, digits=3)
predict(res, transf=exp, digits=2)
### random-effects conditional Poisson model
res <- rma.glmm(measure="IRR", x1i=x1i, t1i=t1i, x2i=x2i, t2i=t2i, data=dat, model="CM.EL")
print(res, digits=3)
predict(res, transf=exp, digits=2)
## End(Not run)