The Probability of Reducing Hospitalization Rates for Bronchiolitis: A Bayesian Analysis

Author:

Dong Larry,Klassen Terry P.,Johnson David W.,Correll Rhonda,Gouin Serge,Bhatt Maala,Patel HemaORCID,Joubert Gary,Black Karen J. L.,Turner Troy W. S.,Whitehouse Sandra R.,Plint Amy C.,Heath AnnaORCID

Abstract

Structured AbstractBackgroundBronchiolitis exerts a high burden on children, their families and the healthcare system. The Canadian Bronchiolitis Epinephrine Steroid Trial (CanBEST) assessed whether administering epinephrine alone, dexamethasone alone, or in combination (EpiDex) could reduce bronchiolitis-related hospitalizations among children less than 12 months of age compared to placebo. CanBEST demonstrated a statistically significant reduction in 7-day hospitalization risk with EpiDex in an unadjusted analysis but not after adjustment.ObjectiveTo explore the probability that EpiDex results in a reduction in hospitalizations using Bayesian methods.Study DesignUsing prior distributions that represent varying levels of preexisting enthusiasm or skepticism and information about the treatment effectbeforedata were collected, the Bayesian distribution of the relative risk of hospitalization compared to placebo was determined. The probability that the treatment effect is less 1, 0.9, 0.8 and 0.6, indicating increasing reductions in hospitalization risk, are computed alongside 95% credible intervals.ResultsCombining a minimally informative prior distribution with the data from CanBEST provides comparable results to the original analysis. Unless strongly skeptical views about the effectiveness of EpiDex were considered, the 95% credible interval for the treatment effect lies below 1, indicating a reduction in hospitalizations. There is a 90% probability that EpiDex results in a clinically meaningful reduction in hospitalization of 10% even when incorporating skeptical views, with a 67% probability when considering strongly skeptical views.ConclusionA Bayesian analysis demonstrates a high chance that EpiDex reduces hospitalization rates for bronchiolitis, although strongly skeptical individuals may require additional evidence to change practice.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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