Author:
Krahn Ulrike,Binder Harald,König Jochem
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Health Informatics,Epidemiology
Reference41 articles.
1. Wells GA, Sultan SA, Chen L, Khan M, Coyle D (Eds): Indirect Evidence: Indirect Treatment Comparisons in Meta-Analysis. 2009, Ottawa: Canadian Agency for Drugs and Technologies in Health
2. Hoaglin DC, Hawkins N, Jansen JP, Scott DA, Itzler R, Cappelleri JC, Boersma C, Thompson D, Larholt KM, Diaz M, Barrett A: Conducting indirect-treatment-comparison and network-meta-analysis studies: report of the ISPOR task force on indirect treatment comparisons good research practices: part 2. Value Health. 2011, 14 (4): 429-437. 10.1016/j.jval.2011.01.011. [
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jval.2011.01.011
]
3. Dias S, Welton NJ, Sutton AJ, E AA (Eds): A Generalised Linear Modelling Framework for Pairwise and Network Meta-Analysis of Randomised Controlled Trials,. 2011, NICE DSU: Technical Support Document 2, [
http://www.nicedsu.org.uk
]
4. Salanti G: Indirect and mixed-treatment comparison, network, or multiple-treatments meta-analysis: many names, many benefits, many concerns for the next generation evidence synthesis tool. Res Syn Meth. 2012, 3 (2): 80-97. 10.1002/jrsm.1037. [
http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/jrsm.1037
]
5. Baker SG, Kramer BS: The transitive fallacy for randomized trials: if A bests B and B bests C in separate trials, is A better than C?. BMC Med Res Methodol. 2002, 2: 13-10.1186/1471-2288-2-13.