Happy to announce that our long-awaited preprint is up!
We assessed shortcomings in the Loeb (2022) clinical trial paper that reported medical masks to be noninferior to N95s for COVID prevention.
It's a long read, but we hope you'll find it educational.
As usual for a preprint, it's extra important to look at the evidence and not just accept the conclusions. Our analysis is easy to repeat. Please do the same for any criticisms - look for the substance, call out handwaving and appeals to authority.
I'll put the figures here for ease of reference, but please do read the whole thing (including the Appendix!).
Here's Fig. 1, a timeline of the study. Note that major changes were made 95% of the way through the study period (red & black line), which determined the outcome:
The study was a noninferiority trial. That can make the terminology a bit complex. That's discussed in the main text, but Fig. 2 shows some examples of how altering how you count COVID cases (as happened in this trial) can impact the results you get.
Fig. 3 shows how the successive alterations to the trial changed the outcome. The hypothesis of noninferiority envisages a distribution centred on the black line, and the reported finding of noninferiority required that the 95% CI (illustrated) not touch the red line.
Fig. 4 shows that even minor changes to the reported results would be enough to reverse the reported outcome of noninferiority against the prespecified criterion (although the prespecified analyses were not reported).
Fig. 5 shows how the amount of potential harm that the study was willing to accept as "noninferior" (on behalf of both participants, and those working under policies based on the results of this study) was expanded from the already high value that was initially specified.
Fig. 6 is particularly concerning - there was a statistically significant correlation between male recorded sex and allocation to the more protective, standards-compliant N95 arm. In addition to iniquity of risk, this may bias self-reporting of COVID (the primary outcome).
There were a number of retroactive changes made to the trial registry post publication, which defeats the purpose of registering a trial. Fig. 7 shows an example with additional back-dating that was not recorded in an otherwise nearly-identical protocol dated 2022.05.01.
Fig. 8 compiles a list of critical questions for which answers are urgently needed (CAN/CSA-Z94.4-18 is the applicable Canadian standard for respiratory protection against bioaerosol hazards in the workplace, which specifically includes healthcare workers).
And here are our conclusions. The shortcomings of the study are so significant that they reach beyond it and into any and all processes, policies and materials that made use of the findings.
I would like to thank co-authors @sameo416, @JuliaMWrightDal, @jmcrookston, @GosiaGasperoPhD, @DFisman, and Corinna Nielson (who is also our SPOR Community Advocate), and also the broader community that has surfaced several of these concerns over the past year.
This is a tough topic. Supportive members of three different Faculties have advised that I risk retaliation here in Calgary just for asking difficult questions. But, if academics won't speak up, how can we justify tenure?
@dsoq @PeoplesCDC "Narrative A" in the Isolation draft depends almost entirely (looks like >97%?) on the Radonovich 2019 and Loeb 2009 studies, which were intermittent-use trials (e.g. participants put the N95 on 👉after being exposed👈) - and they wonder why scientists don't take them seriously.
@dsoq @PeoplesCDC This is the problem with the mindless embrace of "Evidence Based Medicine" by public health. 👉EBM is not rigorous👈. The entire foundation for "Narrative A" is "we don't know how to use PPE and we don't want to learn, therefore it won't work".
Sloppy thinking, sloppy product.
@dsoq @PeoplesCDC The tension between clinical guidance development and science is in how a big, expensive, fatally flawed study (poorly designed, poorly implemented, misrepresented, etc) is dealt with.
Science throws it out.
Clinical guidance calls it "pragmatic" and "best available evidence".
@moss_sphagnum @PeteUK7 The study showed noninferiority of wooly hats under an intermittent-use protocol, with workers donning their hardhats when within three feet of a falling object. Experts attempting to educate IPC leads in use of PPE were drowned out by shouts of "pragmatic!" and "gold standard!"
@moss_sphagnum @PeteUK7 Initial results showed inferiority of wooly hats when exposed to falling objects on the jobsite.
The study was then relocated to an earthquake zone where participants were struck by falling debris in the community.
Injuries were not affected by the type of hat not being worn.
@moss_sphagnum @PeteUK7 Failure of randomization resulted in a statistically significant bias towards male participants being allocated to the more protective, standards-compliant hardhat arm of the trial, and female participants to the wooly hat arm, invalidating the trial.
I want to highlight a story from May 2020 that really hammers home the mismanagement of the pandemic by public health and infection control leaders.
Nursing home in Montreal, COVID everywhere, staff sick, people dying. It killed a significant proportion of the people there.
Why did this happen? The employer was denying N95s, denying testing. Not even properly isolating infected residents, and no one paying attention to ventilation either.
This sounds like: 1) homicidal stupidity 2) what IPAC is currently doing in most hospitals
The military was brought it, and because unlike IPAC they are not complete idiots and have an understanding of how to protect against biological hazards, they wore the proper PPE (and the nurses were allowed to have N95s as well now) - and someone checked the ventilation.
@EvonneTCurran Evidence Based Medicine. It isn't just that EBM has subjective methodological preferences that override research rigour. It's that belief in EBM as "how science works" is *inherently incompatible with rigour*.
It's like believing 2+2 can be 5 if the right people say it is. If...
@EvonneTCurran ...you train someone to believe that, you haven't just misled them about the outcome of that specific calculation. To get them there, you'd have had to destroy their connection to the logic of mathematics. You couldn't trust any calculation they did after that.
When used...
@EvonneTCurran ...properly - as a heuristic, recognizing it's only a heuristic - EBM can be useful. But believing EBM is "how science works" is incompatible with the rigour and logic necessary to understand and apply science.
You can have one or the other, but you can't have both.
This is just the tip of the iceberg of Russian manipulation in Canadian politics.
Pay attention to which politicians *don't* want it looked into, and ask yourself why that might be...and whether their wealth is consistent with their income.
Canada doesn't have just a peripheral role here either. Support for Ukraine - and the influence to spread that support - likely made replacing Canada's government with a friendlier one a priority for Russia. It actually looks like TENET got its start here: tennessean.com/story/news/cri…
I really hope CSIS and the RCMP are on top of this, and looking into Russian election interference in Canada via this program - and what other efforts are out there as well. What channels does Russia have into the secretive back rooms of our political parties?
@globeandmail Because our public health leaders are completely out of their depth, and care more about covering up their own incompetence than doing their jobs.
Because an MD is not a PhD, and letting cosplay scientists exclude real ones is not an effective way to handle a science problem.
@globeandmail Because medical politics is a toxic, authoritarian tar pit that selects for the worst members of the profession, and gives them control over their betters.
Because a "Thin White Line" mentality means outside criticism of pseudoscientific medical guidance is ignored.
@globeandmail Because journalists haven't put enough thought into who they platform, and just accept silly claims by clinicians with little or no relevant advanced training that they understand everything that touches human health better than actual experts.