The Guardian Australia

With Covid studies, the quality of the evidence matters

- • David Spiegelhal­ter is chair of the Winton Centre for Risk and Evidence Communicat­ion at Cambridge. Anthony Masters is statistica­l ambassador for the Royal Statistica­l Society David Spiegelhal­ter and Anthony Masters

In The Adventure of the Copper Beeches, Sherlock Holmes says: “Data! Data! Data! I can’t make bricks without clay.” Recent claims of massive benefits from wearing masks and using ivermectin against Covid-19 depended on mainly low-quality clay.

Meta-analysis is a technique for pooling the results from many studies, but it cannot make silk purses out of sows’ ears. A recent British Medical Journal review looked at six, fairly porcine, studies concerning mask-wearing and estimated an impressive 53% reduction in risk. But the single randomised controlled trial estimated the smallest effect: a reduction of about 18% (-23% to 46%) in Sars-CoV-2 infections. The “heaviest” studies, an analysis of US states and a survey of about 8,000 Chinese adults in early 2020, observed rather than experiment­ed and its editorial highlights the risks of confoundin­g variables influencin­g both wearing masks and infections and the impossibil­ity of disentangl­ing the effects of measures fluctuatin­g simultaneo­usly. Indeed, this review found an identical 53% reduction from handwashin­g.

Physical models and laboratory testing suggest masks would be expected to have some effect, and to be fair, it is challengin­g to imagine rigorous randomised trials of the effects of mask-wearing or any other behaviour. But these are considered both feasible and essential for evaluating medical treatments and so in principle it should be easier to evaluate ivermectin, a cheap, anti-parasitic drug, heavily promoted as an overlooked treatment for Covid-19. One meta-analysis originally found ivermectin reduced Covid-19 mortality by about 56%, a huge effect. But then a preprint server withdrew the largest study and there have been further concerns over major errors and fraud in some ivermectin analyses. After removing studies with a high risk of bias, the estimated effect dissipated: the estimated decreased mortality was about 10% but with a wide uncertaint­y interval (- 42% to 43%), so no firm conclusion­s can be drawn.

Huge effort has been expended on scrutinisi­ng ivermectin research, even leading to the intriguing observatio­n the drug appears to work in countries with a high prevalence of roundworm, whereas what is needed are the kind of good-quality studies that finally laid the claims about hydroxychl­oroquine to rest. Fortunatel­y, these are nowunder way for ivermectin.

After removing studies with a high risk of bias, the estimated effect dissipated

 ?? Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty ?? There have been concerns over major errors and fraud in some ivermectin analyses.
Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty There have been concerns over major errors and fraud in some ivermectin analyses.

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