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Yongdong Ouyang
Assistant Professor

Curriculum vitae


Biostatistics and Bioinformatics

Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center

RSC 424, Elm & Carlton St, Buffalo, New York, USA



Adherence to key recommendations for design and analysis of Stepped-Wedge Cluster Randomized Trials: A Review of trials published 2016–2022


Journal article


Pascale Nevins, Mary M Ryan, Kendra Davis-Plourde, Yongdong Ouyang, J. P. Pereira Macedo, C. Meng, Guangyu Tong, Xueqi Wang, Luis Ortiz-Reyes, Agnès Caille, Fan Li, Monica Taljaard
Clinical Trials, 2023

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMedCentral PubMed
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APA   Click to copy
Nevins, P., Ryan, M. M., Davis-Plourde, K., Ouyang, Y., Macedo, J. P. P., Meng, C., … Taljaard, M. (2023). Adherence to key recommendations for design and analysis of Stepped-Wedge Cluster Randomized Trials: A Review of trials published 2016–2022. Clinical Trials.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Nevins, Pascale, Mary M Ryan, Kendra Davis-Plourde, Yongdong Ouyang, J. P. Pereira Macedo, C. Meng, Guangyu Tong, et al. “Adherence to Key Recommendations for Design and Analysis of Stepped-Wedge Cluster Randomized Trials: A Review of Trials Published 2016–2022.” Clinical Trials (2023).


MLA   Click to copy
Nevins, Pascale, et al. “Adherence to Key Recommendations for Design and Analysis of Stepped-Wedge Cluster Randomized Trials: A Review of Trials Published 2016–2022.” Clinical Trials, 2023.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{pascale2023a,
  title = {Adherence to key recommendations for design and analysis of Stepped-Wedge Cluster Randomized Trials: A Review of trials published 2016–2022},
  year = {2023},
  journal = {Clinical Trials},
  author = {Nevins, Pascale and Ryan, Mary M and Davis-Plourde, Kendra and Ouyang, Yongdong and Macedo, J. P. Pereira and Meng, C. and Tong, Guangyu and Wang, Xueqi and Ortiz-Reyes, Luis and Caille, Agnès and Li, Fan and Taljaard, Monica}
}

Abstract

Background/Aims The stepped-wedge cluster randomized trial (SW-CRT), in which clusters are randomized to a time at which they will transition to the intervention condition – rather than a trial arm – is a relatively new design. SW-CRTs have additional design and analytical considerations compared to conventional parallel arm trials. To inform future methodological development, including guidance for trialists and the selection of parameters for statistical simulation studies, we conducted a review of recently published SW-CRTs. Specific objectives were to describe (1) the types of designs used in practice, (2) adherence to key requirements for statistical analysis, and (3) practices around covariate adjustment. We also examined changes in adherence over time and by journal impact factor. Methods We used electronic searches to identify primary reports of SW-CRTs published 2016–2022. Two reviewers extracted information from each trial report and its protocol, if available, and resolved disagreements through discussion. Results We identified 160 eligible trials, randomizing a median (Q1–Q3) of 11 (8–18) clusters to 5 (4–7) sequences. The majority (122, 76%) were cross-sectional (almost all with continuous recruitment), 23 (14%) were closed cohorts and 15 (9%) open cohorts. Many trials had complex design features such as multiple or multivariate primary outcomes (50, 31%) or time-dependent repeated measures (27, 22%). The most common type of primary outcome was binary (51%); continuous outcomes were less common (26%). The most frequently used method of analysis was a generalized linear mixed model (112, 70%); generalized estimating equations were used less frequently (12, 8%). Among 142 trials with fewer than 40 clusters, only 9 (6%) reported using methods appropriate for a small number of clusters. Statistical analyses clearly adjusted for time effects in 119 (74%), for within-cluster correlations in 132 (83%), and for distinct between-period correlations in 13 (8%). Covariates were included in the primary analysis of the primary outcome in 82 (51%) and were most often individual-level covariates; however, clear and complete pre-specification of covariates was uncommon. Adherence to some key methodological requirements (adjusting for time effects, accounting for within-period correlation) was higher among trials published in higher versus lower impact factor journals. Substantial improvements over time were not observed although a slight improvement was observed in the proportion accounting for a distinct between-period correlation. Conclusions Future methods development should prioritize methods for SW-CRTs with binary or time-to-event outcomes, small numbers of clusters, continuous recruitment designs, multivariate outcomes, or time-dependent repeated measures. Trialists, journal editors, and peer reviewers should be aware that SW-CRTs have additional methodological requirements over parallel arm designs including the need to account for period effects as well as complex intracluster correlations.



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