Literature DB >> 12234641

Intention-to-treat meets missing data: implications of alternate strategies for analyzing clinical trials data.

Charla Nich1, Kathleen M Carroll.   

Abstract

True intention-to-treat analyses are rare in reports of randomized clinical trials. To highlight the complex issues that arise in conducting and interpreting data from intention-to-treat analyses in studies with substantial levels of protocol violation (e.g. attrition, noncompliance, or withdrawal of participants), data from a clinical trial of treatment for cocaine dependence were analyzed using three strategies to manage missing data: Strategy 1 addressed the effectiveness of treatments based on data collected from participants up to the point of dropout. Strategy 2 addressed the effectiveness of treatments based on data from the full intended duration of the protocol including data collected after participant dropout. The third strategy used a more novel approach, which used an intention-to-treat strategy for the full duration of the trial and the full sample, but also evaluated the effect of treatment retention outcomes by including an independent variable to reflect active treatment retention as a time-varying covariate. Conclusions about the relative efficacy of the study treatments varied to some extent depending on the analytic strategy used. These findings suggest that investigators should make every effort to conduct intent-to-treat analyses, but also to make use of multiple analytic strategies to fully understand the effects of the treatments studied. Moreover, regardless of the strategy used, investigators should clearly describe their handling of data from participants who violate the protocol.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12234641      PMCID: PMC3651592          DOI: 10.1016/s0376-8716(02)00111-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Drug Alcohol Depend        ISSN: 0376-8716            Impact factor:   4.492


  23 in total

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  31 in total

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Authors:  Kathleen M Carroll; Charla Nich; Elise E DeVito; Julia M Shi; Mehmet Sofuoglu
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Review 7.  Toward empirical identification of a clinically meaningful indicator of treatment outcome: features of candidate indicators and evaluation of sensitivity to treatment effects and relationship to one year follow up cocaine use outcomes.

Authors:  Kathleen M Carroll; Brian D Kiluk; Charla Nich; Elise E DeVito; Suzanne Decker; Donna LaPaglia; Dianne Duffey; Theresa A Babuscio; Samuel A Ball
Journal:  Drug Alcohol Depend       Date:  2014-01-31       Impact factor: 4.492

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Authors:  Kathleen M Carroll; Samuel A Ball; Steve Martino; Charla Nich; Theresa A Babuscio; Kathryn F Nuro; Melissa A Gordon; Galina A Portnoy; Bruce J Rounsaville
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Authors:  Joy M Schmitz; Marc E Mooney; F Gerard Moeller; Angela L Stotts; Charles Green; John Grabowski
Journal:  Drug Alcohol Depend       Date:  2007-12-27       Impact factor: 4.492

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