Abstract

BackgroundA stepped wedge cluster randomised trial (SWCRT) is a multicentred study which allows an intervention to be rolled out at sites in a random order. Once the intervention is initiated at a site, all participants within that site remain exposed to the intervention for the remainder of the study.The time since the start of the study (“calendar time”) may affect outcome measures through underlying time trends or periodicity. The time since the intervention was introduced to a site (“exposure time”) may also affect outcomes cumulatively for successful interventions, possibly in addition to a step change when the intervention began.MethodsMotivated by a SWCRT of self-monitoring for bipolar disorder, we conducted a simulation study to compare model formulations to analyse data from a SWCRT under 36 different scenarios in which time was related to the outcome (improvement in mood score). The aim was to find a model specification that would produce reliable estimates of intervention effects under different scenarios. Nine different formulations of a linear mixed effects model were fitted to these datasets. These models varied in the specification of calendar and exposure times.ResultsModelling the effects of the intervention was best accomplished by including terms for both calendar time and exposure time. Treating time as categorical (a separate parameter for each measurement time-step) achieved the best coverage probabilities and low bias, but at a cost of wider confidence intervals compared to simpler models for those scenarios which were sufficiently modelled by fewer parameters. Treating time as continuous and including a quadratic time term performed similarly well, with slightly larger variations in coverage probability, but narrower confidence intervals and in some cases lower bias. The impact of misspecifying the covariance structure was comparatively small.ConclusionsWe recommend that unless there is a priori information to indicate the form of the relationship between time and outcomes, data from SWCRTs should be analysed with a linear mixed effects model that includes separate categorical terms for calendar time and exposure time. Prespecified sensitivity analyses should consider the different formulations of these time effects in the model, to assess their impact on estimates of intervention effects.

Highlights

  • A stepped wedge cluster randomised trial (SWCRT) is a special case of a cross-over cluster randomised trial, in which the direction of cross-over is always from the control condition to the intervention condition [1]

  • Modelling the effects of the intervention was best accomplished by including terms for both calendar time and exposure time

  • Treating time as categorical achieved the best coverage probabilities and low bias, but at a cost of wider confidence intervals compared to simpler models for those scenarios which were sufficiently modelled by fewer parameters

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Summary

Introduction

A stepped wedge cluster randomised trial (SWCRT) is a special case of a cross-over cluster randomised trial, in which the direction of cross-over is always from the control condition to the intervention condition [1]. The parallel cluster randomised trial is the gold standard, the SWCRT design is an appropriate option for large-scale intervention roll-outs when it is logistically infeasible to deploy the intervention at several clusters simultaneously. One of the benefits of a SWCRT is that, at each time step, resources can be concentrated at the cluster where the intervention is being introduced, rather than resources spread across all intervention clusters simultaneously, as would be the case in a parallel cluster randomised trial design. A stepped wedge cluster randomised trial (SWCRT) is a multicentred study which allows an intervention to be rolled out at sites in a random order. The time since the intervention was introduced to a site (“exposure time”) may affect outcomes cumulatively for successful interventions, possibly in addition to a step change when the intervention began

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