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1 meta-analysis is confounded by missing data (publication bias).
2 sessment of risk of bias across studies (ie, publication bias).
3 r (k=8; 1.02 [0.90-1.15]; I(2)=97.84% and no publication bias).
4 We observed no evidence of publication bias.
5 dies was found, but there was no evidence of publication bias.
6 dies, few good-quality studies, and possible publication bias.
7 validated frailty instruments, and potential publication bias.
8 individual studies, further reducing risk of publication bias.
9 heterogeneity due to unmeasured factors, and publication bias.
10 sis and a network meta-analysis and assessed publication bias.
11 s minimal to moderate, with rare evidence of publication bias.
12 effect sizes across all malignancies due to publication bias.
13 th many methodological limitations; possible publication bias.
14 re is limited long-term data and substantial publication bias.
15 ns simply reflect pedigree ascertainment and publication bias.
16 with any heterogeneity in effect size and no publication bias.
17 common method (n = 30 synopses) of assessing publication bias.
18 direct tests did not provide any evidence of publication bias.
19 the funnel plot did not provide evidence of publication bias.
20 SSI remained after correction for potential publication bias.
21 ize across all malignancies due to potential publication bias.
22 There was no evidence of publication bias.
23 (ps > .90), and there was no indication of a publication bias.
24 heterogeneity among studies and evidence for publication bias.
25 0001), but these analyses were confounded by publication bias.
26 y (n = 18) settings, without any evidence of publication bias.
27 and the funnel plot provided no evidence for publication bias.
28 ions suggest that the results are not due to publication bias.
29 that these results were not attributable to publication bias.
30 tween-study heterogeneity but no evidence of publication bias.
31 ity in results between studies and potential publication bias.
32 random effect meta-analyses and adjusted for publication bias.
33 a random-effects meta-analysis and assessed publication bias.
34 Analyses provided no indication of publication bias.
35 27 (1.10-1.46; I(2)=0%), with no evidence of publication bias.
36 or data inhomogeneity, and identification of publication bias.
37 There was no significant heterogeneity or publication bias.
38 ts and Egger's linear regression to test for publication bias.
39 of T2D events, which may be attributable to publication bias.
40 ibuting studies (I(2)=64.4%) and evidence of publication bias.
41 gnificant after trim-and-fill correction for publication bias.
42 There was some suggestion of publication bias.
43 er quality trials, sparse data, and possible publication bias.
44 determined to be at moderate-to-high risk of publication bias.
45 m-and-fill analyses to identify a negligible publication bias.
46 nges in co-medication, delay in response and publication bias.
47 or confounding and selection, reporting, and publication bias.
48 udy quality, and the Egger test was used for publication bias.
49 be explained, but there was no indication of publication bias.
50 published literature may be attributable to publication bias.
51 ich are more likely to be noticed because of publication bias.
52 There was no evidence of heterogeneity or publication bias.
53 ted during the study years were assessed for publication bias.
54 tion models, and the difficulty of assessing publication bias.
55 s demonstrated significant heterogeneity and publication bias.
56 This might be due to publication bias.
57 terogeneity between studies and evidence for publication bias.
58 ot and Egger test did not reveal significant publication bias.
59 primarily retrospective studies and positive publication bias.
60 Funnel plot analysis suggested substantial publication bias.
61 y underreport the durability of QR, owing to publication bias.
62 all completed studies were included to avoid publication bias.
63 Egger's test (p=0.44) showed no evidence of publication bias.
64 ffects models for analysis and evaluated for publication bias.
65 0.00), with no evidence of heterogeneity or publication bias.
66 eterogeneity between studies and evidence of publication bias.
67 verestimation of the existence and extent of publication bias.
68 d fill' were used to examine and correct for publication bias.
69 score, 8.2; range, 5-12) with no evidence of publication bias.
70 82.65%, p < 0.001) and evidence of possible publication bias.
71 ies were identified to meaningfully test for publication bias.
72 ty and funnel plots were applied to evaluate publication bias.
73 y affected by between-study heterogeneity or publication bias.
74 he results of this review may be affected by publications bias.
75 ty of the effects among the studies, and few publication biases.
76 his latter finding could be interpreted as a publication bias against non-US authors, the US effect o
77 sensitivity analysis to adjust for possible publication bias against weak results did not diminish t
83 Fifteen of the studies investigated study publication bias and five investigated outcome reporting
87 pplicability and power in RCTs, and possible publication bias and lack of adjusted analyses in NRCSs.
88 are effective for plague treatment, although publication bias and low numbers in certain treatment gr
91 mpirical evidence for the existence of study publication bias and outcome reporting bias is shown.
93 openly available should minimize problems of publication bias and questionable post hoc analyses.
94 im and fill analysis, suggesting only slight publication bias and reducing the overall effect to a 19
101 multiple testing within and between studies, publication bias and the expectation that true allelic e
103 (k=23; 0.89 [0.84-0.95]; I(2)=98.47% and no publication bias), and prostate cancer (k=4; 0.78 [0.70-
104 Begg's funnel plot, and Egger test to assess publication bias, and conducted meta-regressions to expl
106 nadequate reporting of safety data, possible publication bias, and few head-to-head comparisons.
108 mogeneity of the ES distributions, potential publication bias, and impact of potential moderators wer
109 udies, imprecise summary estimates, possible publication bias, and no evaluation of effect on clinica
110 ies (n = 11), existence of heterogeneity and publication bias, and only English-written articles sear
111 he framework addressed residual confounding, publication bias, and p-hacking using large-scale propen
112 ects are small, inflated by risk of bias and publication bias, and particularly unstable at follow-up
114 shed in order to overcome winner's curse and publication bias, and to allow for stratification by pat
115 ure of GWAS inherently minimises the risk of publication bias, and where available these studies shou
116 s, including small sample sizes, referral or publication biases, and variability in protocols for sel
117 verall associations by age and sex; assessed publication bias; and qualitatively assessed sensitivity
121 studies allowed us to apply a formal test of publication bias, as well as explore the impact of vario
122 n combination with the SE are unsuitable for publication bias assessments and can lead to false-posit
123 research, and often include an assessment of publication bias based on visual or analytical detection
124 symmetrical distribution with no evidence of publication bias (Begg's test: intercept = 0.40; p = 0.6
126 op cognitive impairment, with no evidence of publication bias but significant heterogeneity between s
127 r (k=4; 0.78 [0.70-0.86]; I(2)=79.68% and no publication bias), but not for colorectal cancer (k=8; 1
131 tratified analysis, and meta-regression, and publication bias by funnel plots, Egger's test, and fill
133 (k=27; 0.65 [0.60-0.71]; I(2)=97.58% and no publication bias), cervical cancer (k=23; 0.89 [0.84-0.9
134 e results were not significantly affected by publication bias, choice of outcome measure, inclusion o
138 nly English-language articles were included, publication bias could not be formally assessed, and mos
139 ) tests were not significant; therefore, the publication bias did not play a role in the results.
140 le size (all p < 0.01), with moderate visual publication bias due to missing smaller sample-size stud
141 22 (95% CI 1.63-6.33), with some evidence of publication bias (Egger's test p=0.018, Begg's test p=0.
151 en identified, such as underpowered studies, publication bias, imprecise theories, and inadequate sta
152 asymmetry and trim-and-fill revealed a clear publication bias in experimental studies and early clini
165 MDD, high thresholds for quality, potential publication bias, limited data on harms, and sparse evid
168 iation between the four major areas and ASD, publication bias may have led to an overestimation of th
170 impact of compromised internal validity and publication bias mean that efficacy is likely to be some
171 nt primary end points and time to treatment, publication bias, neglected quality criteria and low pow
172 ain relief as a primary measure and assessed publication bias; NNT was calculated with the fixed-effe
174 fy the stage of research production at which publication bias occurs: Authors do not write up and sub
175 OR 0.76 [95% CI 0.72-0.79]; I(2)=98.53% with publication bias of Egger's p value=0.025), breast cance
180 from cohort studies that have assessed study publication bias or outcome reporting bias in randomised
184 ng bias was examined and classified as study publication bias, outcome reporting bias, or spin (abstr
189 luded studies, testing for heterogeneity and publication bias, pooling results across studies, and fo
190 mple sizes, selective reporting of outcomes, publication bias, poor reporting, and heterogeneous outc
193 ld studies, i.e., data free of reporting and publication bias (r = 0.103, 95% CI 0.074-0.132, eight s
201 was used depending on heterogeneity (I(2)); publication bias risks were assessed by means of funnel
202 describing how psychologists' concerns with publication bias shifted from worrying about file-drawer
207 epticism about most statistical solutions to publication bias, take positions on the analysis and int
208 prognosis during the acute phase, despite a publication bias that could have led to an overestimatio
214 or exhaled VOC profiles were calculated; and publication bias, threshold effect and heterogeneity wer
216 ll, these associations were not explained by publication bias, undue effects of individual studies, o
217 These results could not be accounted for by publication biases, unusual results from any one observa
219 ga-3 benefit was removed after adjusting for publication bias using the trim-and-fill method (SMD=0.0
220 eterogeneity was found (I(2) test, 85%), and publication bias was absent (Egger test, P = 0.57).
222 Heterogeneity was assessed using I(2) and publication bias was assessed using Begg's funnel plot a
225 quality was assessed using Jadad score, and publication bias was assessed using funnel plots and Egg
227 g the I(2) statistic, and the possibility of publication bias was assessed using the funnel plot and
230 geneity was evaluated using I(2) statistics, publication bias was assessed via funnel plots and the B
233 sources of unpublished data, and the risk of publication bias was considered in less than half of SRs
236 omized trials, for which no heterogeneity or publication bias was detected (p = .77), dopamine was as
238 ertension, dyslipidemia, and stroke, whereas publication bias was detected for RFCS and diabetes.
252 Small-sample bias indicative of possible publication bias was found for some effects, particularl
265 ase in the effect size point estimate due to publication bias was modest (8%) and not statistically s
284 ical techniques that evaluate and adjust for publication bias, we question whether depletion is a rea
287 investigate whether experimental issues and publication bias were contributing to inconsistency and/
296 nd that the included studies may suffer from publication bias, whereby substantial differences betwee
297 of this systematic review was the threat of publication bias wherein many countries may not have doc
298 sual inspection of a funnel plot revealed no publication bias, which was confirmed by the Begg test (
299 increased access to regulatory agency data, publication bias will continue to blur distinctions betw
300 -point-item quality checklist and calculated publication bias with Egger regression and the trim and