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The pseudoscience of lithium and suicide: Reanalysis of a misleading meta-analysis.

Authors :
Ghaemi, Seyyed Nassir
Source :
Journal of Psychopharmacology. Jul2024, Vol. 38 Issue 7, p597-603. 7p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

By manipulating inclusion criteria, one can prove whatever point one wishes in meta-analysis. This critique examines a recent meta-analysis claiming lithium ineffectiveness for suicidality, based on three biased features: inclusion of many large studies specifically designed to exclude suicidality, producing zero suicide outcomes in all groups (n = 1856), thereby artificially decreasing statistical significance; arbitrary exclusion of all trials prior to the year 2000, thereby excluding two randomized clinical trials which demonstrated benefit for lithium; and underreporting of placebo suicide events in a recent randomized trial. It thereby created a smaller effect size (two suicides with lithium versus five with placebo = RR = 0.42), though still beneficial for lithium, and a larger denominator of no events (total n for included studies = 2578), leading to the claim of statistical non-significance (95% confidence intervals (CIs) 0.1–4.5). The same literature can be analyzed including the two excluded older studies, and including the two placebo deaths in the recent trial, producing a larger effect size (two suicides with lithium versus nine with placebo, RR = 0.25). Furthermore, uninformative studies with no events could be excluded (total n for included studies = 1203), as is standard practice in meta-analysis, producing statistically significant results (95% CIs 0.05, 0.83). This more complete, more accurate, and less biased meta-analysis is provided in this article. In short, including all studies with non-zero suicide outcomes, there is clear benefit for lithium. The recent meta-analysis is a classic example of pseudoscience, using scientific technique superficially to confirm, rather than refute, one's own opinions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02698811
Volume :
38
Issue :
7
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Psychopharmacology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178718632
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/02698811241257833