Literature DB >> 35774016

Analysis of stepped wedge cluster randomized trials in the presence of a time-varying treatment effect.

Avi Kenny1, Emily C Voldal1, Fan Xia1, Patrick J Heagerty1, James P Hughes1.   

Abstract

Stepped wedge cluster randomized controlled trials are typically analyzed using models that assume the full effect of the treatment is achieved instantaneously. We provide an analytical framework for scenarios in which the treatment effect varies as a function of exposure time (time since the start of treatment) and define the "effect curve" as the magnitude of the treatment effect on the linear predictor scale as a function of exposure time. The "time-averaged treatment effect" (TATE) and "long-term treatment effect" (LTE) are summaries of this curve. We analytically derive the expectation of the estimator δ ^ $$ \hat{\delta} $$ resulting from a model that assumes an immediate treatment effect and show that it can be expressed as a weighted sum of the time-specific treatment effects corresponding to the observed exposure times. Surprisingly, although the weights sum to one, some of the weights can be negative. This implies that δ ^ $$ \hat{\delta} $$ may be severely misleading and can even converge to a value of the opposite sign of the true TATE or LTE. We describe several models, some of which make assumptions about the shape of the effect curve, that can be used to simultaneously estimate the entire effect curve, the TATE, and the LTE. We evaluate these models in a simulation study to examine the operating characteristics of the resulting estimators and apply them to two real datasets.
© 2022 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  cluster randomized trial; model misspecification; stepped wedge; time-varying treatment effect

Mesh:

Year:  2022        PMID: 35774016      PMCID: PMC9481733          DOI: 10.1002/sim.9511

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Stat Med        ISSN: 0277-6715            Impact factor:   2.497


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