On 2016 May 02, Clive Bates commented:
It is worth drawing out the most telling criticism made by Hajek, McRobbie and Bullen (above) in their response in the Lancet Respiratory Medicine (above).
There are other problems—such as selective inclusion of studies, and selective reporting of data from studies that were included—and limitations the authors acknowledge in the text but ignore in their conclusions. Detailed criticism of the methods is, however, not needed, because lumping incongruous studies together—which were mostly not designed to evaluate the efficacy of e-cigarettes, and contain no useful information on this topic unless misinterpreted—makes no scientific sense in the first place.
The fundamental problem really is of lumping together completely different studies designed to observe different behaviours in different populations with different outcome measures (mostly not to see how well e-cigarettes help smokers quit). This problem is fatal, and has not been addressed convincingly anywhere, and cannot be, by the authors. Meta-anlaysis is fine for pooling, for example, several drug trials conducted in more with almost identical methodology, but not as it used here.
Once all the studies that should not be 'lumped together' are not lumped together, we come back to something more like the Cochrane review: Can electronic cigarettes help people stop smoking or reduce the amount they smoke, and are they safe to use for this purpose?, which is tentatively positive, but weak given the small numbers of relevant studies.
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