| Literature DB >> 28667088 |
Nikolaos Pandis1, Bryan Chung2, Roberta W Scherer3, Diana Elbourne4, Douglas G Altman5.
Abstract
Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28667088 PMCID: PMC5492474 DOI: 10.1136/bmj.j2835
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ ISSN: 0959-8138
Fig 1Extension to CONSORT 2010 checklist for reporting within person randomised trials. For within person trials, a group is the set of participants’ body sites that was allocated a particular intervention.
Information to include in the abstract of a report of a within person randomised trial: extension of CONSORT for abstracts checklist
| Item | Standard CONSORT checklist item | Extension for within person trials |
|---|---|---|
| Title | Identification of study as randomised | Identification of study as a within person trial (or an alternative accepted term in the specialty) |
| Trial design | Description of the trial design (eg parallel, cluster, non-inferiority) | |
| Methods: | ||
| Participants | Eligibility criteria for participants and the settings where the data were collected | Eligibility criteria for body sites |
| Interventions | Interventions intended for each group | Intervention timing: sequential or concurrent |
| Objective | Specific objective or hypothesis | |
| Outcome | Clearly defined primary outcome for this report | |
| Randomisation | How participants were allocated to interventions | How body sites were allocated within a single participant |
| Blinding(masking) | Whether or not participants, care givers, and those assessing the outcomes were blinded to group assignment | |
| Results: | ||
| Numbers randomised | Number of participants randomised to each group | Number of body sites randomised to each group |
| Recruitment | Trial status | |
| Numbers analysed | Number of participants analysed in each group | Number of body sites analysed in each group |
| Outcome | For the primary outcome, a result for each group and the estimated effect size and its precision | |
| Harms | Important adverse events or side effects | For participants and for body sites |
| Conclusions | General interpretation of the results | |
| Trial registration | Registration number and name of trial register | |
| Funding | Source of funding |
Fig 2The abstract on the left is as published.30 The abstract on the right has been amended to comply with the minimum reporting requirements for abstracts shown in table 1, combining the standard checklist item with the extension for within person trials. Added text is shown in red.
Fig 3Flow diagram adapted from He and Manche58
Demographic and baseline data of the participants. Adapted from Song et al60
| Participant characteristics | n (%) unless otherwise specified | |
|---|---|---|
| Age (years)* | 23.4 (3.5) | |
| Sex: | ||
| Male | 14 (58.3%) | |
| Female | 10 (41.7%) | |
| Fitzpatrick skin type: | ||
| III | 12 (50%) | |
| IV | 12 (50%) | |
| Acne severity (baseline): | Chlorophyll-PDT side | Phototherapy only side |
| Grade 2 | 3 (12.5%) | 4 (16.7%) |
| Grade 3 | 15 (62.5%) | 14 (58.3%) |
| Grade 4 | 6 (25.0%) | 6 (25.0%) |
PDT=Photodynamic therapy
Figures are mean (standard deviation)
Display of correlation coefficient, adapted from Fischer et al62
| Exposure | Correlation |
|---|---|
| Conventional and corticotomy | 0.70 |
Matched tabulation of outcomes with two interventions, modified from Innes et al63
| Control restoration* | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hall technique (all teeth with follow-up data) | Major failure | No major failure | Total | Odds ratio (95% CI) |
| Major failure | 4 | 1 | 5 | 0.06 (0.001 to 0.375)† |
| No major failure | 17 | 106 | 123 | |
| Total | 21 | 107 | 128 | |
(All teeth with follow-up data)
The cell counts have been adjusted by adding 1 to each cell to allow calculation of the odds ratio and the 95% confidence interval
Matched pair tabulation for binary results
| Treatment B | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Treatment A | Success | Failure | Total |
| Success | s | t | a=s+t |
| Failure | u | v | c=u+v |
| Total | b=s+u | d=t+v | n=a+b+c+d |
Distribution of eyes and participants with unilateral and bilateral retinopathy prematurity across treatment arms, adapted from the ETROP trial82
| Earlier treatment of retinopathy prematurity | Conventional treatment of retinopathy prematurity | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bilateral | |||
| n | 317 | 317 | 317 participants (634 eyes) |
| Gender: | |||
| Male | 155 (48.9%) | 155 (48.9%) | |
| Female | 162 (51.1%) | 162 (51.1%) | |
| Age | 6.1 months | 6.1 months | |
| Visual Acuity | 12.1 | 12.1 | |
| Unilateral | |||
| n | 42 | 42 | 84 participants (84 eyes) |
| Gender | |||
| Male | 20 (47.6%) | 22(52.4%) | |
| Female | 22 (52.4%) | 20(47.6%) | |
| Age | 5.9 months | 6.0 months | |
| Visual acuity | 12.3 | 12.0 |
Note that the table includes some fictional data.
Estimates and associated 95% confidence intervals separately for the bilateral and unilateral cases. The table has been constructed using the ETROP trial data82
| Events/n (%) | Risk difference (95% CI) | Odds ratio (95% CI) | P value | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eyes treated at high risk prethreshold | Conventionally managed eyes | ||||
| Bilateral | 66/247 (26.7) | 75/247 (30.4) | −3.7% (−0.12 to 0.04) | 0.84 (0.57 to 1.24) | 0.37 |
| Unilateral | 3/33 (9.1) | 5/29 (17.2) | −8.1% (−0.25 to 0.09) | 0.48 (0.11 to 2.03) | 0.34 |