Background:
Meta‐analysis of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) should provide reliable evidence about the effects of interventions. This may be less reliable when only small trials are available.
Methods:
The sample size was determined for all surgical RCTs included in Cochrane Collaboration systematic reviews. The difficulty in interpreting meta‐analysis of small trials is illustrated using two specific reviews.
Results:
The typical sample size for surgical RCTs was small with a median of only 87 participants. Only 39·8 per cent had adequate prerandomization treatment allocation concealment. In both systematic reviews that were assessed in detail, statistically significant early results from meta‐analysis of several small RCTs did not reliably predict the results of subsequent RCTs.
Conclusion:
Surgical RCTs tend to be small and underpowered. Meta‐analysis of such trials does not necessarily produce reliable results. Copyright © 2010 British Journal of Surgery Society Ltd. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.