Abstract

BackgroundPrevious reviews have focussed on the rationale for employing the stepped wedge design (SWD), the areas of research to which the design has been applied and the general characteristics of the design. However these did not focus on the statistical methods nor addressed the appropriateness of sample size methods used.This was a review of the literature of the statistical methodology used in stepped wedge cluster randomised trials.MethodsLiterature Review. The Medline, Embase, PsycINFO, CINAHL and Cochrane databases were searched for methodological guides and RCTs which employed the stepped wedge design.ResultsThis review identified 102 trials which employed the stepped wedge design compared to 37 from the most recent review by Beard et al. 2015. Forty six trials were cohort designs and 45 % (n = 46) had fewer than 10 clusters. Of the 42 articles discussing the design methodology 10 covered analysis and seven covered sample size. For cohort stepped wedge designs there was only one paper considering analysis and one considering sample size methods. Most trials employed either a GEE or mixed model approach to analysis (n = 77) but only 22 trials (22 %) estimated sample size in a way which accounted for the stepped wedge design that was subsequently used.ConclusionsMany studies which employ the stepped wedge design have few clusters but use methods of analysis which may require more clusters for unbiased and efficient intervention effect estimates. There is the need for research on the minimum number of clusters required for both types of stepped wedge design. Researchers should distinguish in the sample size calculation between cohort and cross sectional stepped wedge designs. Further research is needed on the effect of adjusting for the potential confounding of time on the study power.

Highlights

  • Previous reviews have focussed on the rationale for employing the stepped wedge design (SWD), the areas of research to which the design has been applied and the general characteristics of the design

  • We aimed to investigate: 1) the statistical methods that are currently recommended for use for the analysis of stepped wedge cluster randomised controlled trial (CRCT); 2) the methods currently recommended for sample size/power estimation; 3) which methods of analysis for SWDs have been used in practice, and 4) which methods of sample size/power estimation for SWDs have been used in practice

  • One of those excluded specified that the study was a stepped wedge trial in the abstract but no more detail was given about the study design, other than that it was a cross sectional intervention study

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Summary

Introduction

Previous reviews have focussed on the rationale for employing the stepped wedge design (SWD), the areas of research to which the design has been applied and the general characteristics of the design. Withholding an intervention which has not yet proven to be effective is not considered to be unethical but this is often not the perception of individuals, organisations or units which may constitute the clusters for a CRCT, or even ethics committees. Consistent with this perception and the experience of the authors of this paper, recruitment of clusters such as hospitals is easier if the cluster is guaranteed to get the intervention at some stage [13]

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