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Visualising harms in publications of randomised controlled trials: consensus and recommendations.

Rachel PhillipsSuzie CroGraham WheelerSimon BondTim P MorrisSiobhan CreanorCatherine HewittSharon LoveAndre LopesIryna SchlackowCarrol GambleGraeme MacLennanChris HabronAnthony C GordonNikhil VergisTianjing LiRiaz QureshiColin C EverettJane HolmesAmanda KirkhamClare PeckittSarah PirrieNorin AhmedLaura CollettVictoria Cornelius
Published in: BMJ (Clinical research ed.) (2022)
Visualisations provide a powerful tool to communicate harms in clinical trials, offering an alternative perspective to the traditional frequency tables. Increasing the use of visualisations for harm outcomes in clinical trial manuscripts and reports will provide clearer presentation of information and enable more informative interpretations. The limitations of each visualisation are discussed and examples of where their use would be inappropriate are given. Although the decision tree aids the choice of visualisation, the statistician and clinical trial team must ultimately decide the most appropriate visualisations for their data and objectives. Trialists should continue to examine crude numbers alongside visualisations to fully understand harm profiles.
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