| Literature DB >> 29745363 |
Katie F M Marwick1, Anna J Stevenson1, Caitlin Davies1, Stephen M Lawrie1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Single patient or 'n-of-1' trials are a pragmatic method to achieve optimal, evidence-based treatments for individual patients. Such trials could be particularly valuable in chronic, heterogeneous, difficult to treat illnesses such as schizophrenia.AimsTo identify how often, and in what way, n-of-1 trials have been used in schizophrenia.Entities:
Keywords: Personalised; medicine; patient-centred; precision; psychosis; stratified
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29745363 PMCID: PMC6025794 DOI: 10.1192/bjp.2018.71
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Psychiatry ISSN: 0007-1250 Impact factor: 9.319
Fig. 1Study selection.
Study characteristics with key patient data
| Patient characteristics | Trial design | Duration | Intervention used | Comparator used | Blinding | Main outcome Measure(s) | Analysis | Main Result(s) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alford (1986)19 | 22-year-old man with chronic paranoid schizophrenia (DSM III) receiving fluphenazine decanoate | ABAB | Not reported | Cognitive intervention (Social reinforcement-assisted) | Placebo (general conversation) | Patient and treating physician not Blinded. Blinded secondary outcome assessors | Self-reports of frequency and strength of delusional belief, and frequency of Thorazine (when required) use | Qualitative and graphical | Decreasing frequency and strength of belief in delusion ideation during treatment phases. Decreased administration of Thorazine (when required) |
| Blanco-Lopez | 18-year-old woman with schizophrenia receiving clozapine | BAB | 8 weeks | Transcranial magnetic stimulation of left temporoparietal cortex | Treatment as usual | None reported | Unclear but appeared to be self-report of duration of time without auditory hallucinations and depressive symptoms. Also clinical global impression | Qualitative | Decreasing frequency of auditory hallucinations. Improved mood. Improved clinical impression |
| Done | 42-year-old man with chronic schizophrenia receiving flupentixol decanoate 150 mg weekly. Target symptom auditory hallucinations | ABAC | 5 months | Right ear plug | No ear plug (B) and left ear plug only (C) | None reported | Self-report of frequency, volume and disturbing content of hallucinations | Non-parametric statistics | Right ear plug reduced the frequency and volume of hallucinations compared with left ear plug or no plug |
| Gorczynski | 4 patients, all with chronic schizophrenia: a 29-year-old man receiving clozapine; a 28-year-old man receiving loxapine; a 25-year-old woman receiving clozapine, and ‘weight reduction medication’; a 36-year-old woman receiving clozapine | ABA | 10 weeks | Exercise counselling | Treatment as usual | None reported | Self-report of stage of change, self-efficacy and benefits and barriers. Objective assessment of exercise via accelerometer | Parametric statistics, graphical and tabular | No effect on objective assessment of exercise. Self-report indicated progress through stages of change and minor increases in self-efficacy |
| Kay & Opler (1985)21 | 55-year-old woman with chronic paranoid schizophrenia (DSM III) receiving haloperidol 15 mg | Reversal design (ABA) | 27 weeks | L-dopa (Sinemet) (combined with haloperidol) | Placebo (combined with haloperidol) | Double-blind | Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale, Psychopathology Rating Schedule, Span of Attention Test | Non-parametric statistics | Significant improvement in negative symptoms. No change in positive symptoms |
| MacEwan | 36-year-old man with schizophrenia-paranoid type (in partial remission) receiving risperidone 2 mg | ABAB | 30 weeks | Donepezil (10 mg daily) | Treatment as usual | None | Battery of 9 standardised cognitive tests. Self-report of functioning | Simple tabulation and qualitative summary | Increased verbal fluency and subjective concentration |
Cochrane risk of bias table, modified for n-of-1 trials
| Bias reduction measure | Application to | Alford (1986)19 | Blanco-Lopez | Done | Gorczynski | Kay & Opler (1985)21 | MacEwan |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Random sequence generation | Counterbalancing more appropriate than randomisation if small number of blocks | X | X | X | X | X | X |
| Allocation concealment | Less important than in randomised controlled trial as crossover design: both treatments will be received over time | X | X | X | X | X | X |
| Blinding (participants and personnel) | May be harder in small-scale, naturalistic trials. May be less relevant as non-specific effects still worthwhile | X | X | X | X | ✓ | X |
| Blinding (outcome assessors) | Particularly difficult if patient is collecting data on themselves | ? | X | X | X | ✓ | X |
| Completeness of outcome data | for | X | X | X | ? | X | X |
| All outcomes reported | X | ? | X | ✓ | X | X | |
| Other sources of bias minimised | for | X | X | X | X | X | X |
X, high risk; ?, unclear risk; ✓, low risk.