Abstract

BackgroundAccording to the CONSORT statement, significance testing of baseline differences in randomized controlled trials should not be performed. In fact, this practice has been discouraged by numerous authors throughout the last forty years. During that time span, reporting of baseline differences has substantially decreased in the leading general medical journals. Our own experience in the field of nutrition behavior research however, is that co-authors, reviewers and even editors are still very persistent in their demand for these tests. The aim of this paper is therefore to negate this demand by providing clear evidence as to why testing for baseline differences between intervention groups statistically is superfluous and why such results should not be published.DiscussionTesting for baseline differences is often propagated because of the belief that it shows whether randomization was successful and it identifies real or important differences between treatment arms that should be accounted for in the statistical analyses. Especially the latter argument is flawed, because it ignores the fact that the prognostic strength of a variable is also important when the interest is in adjustment for confounding. In addition, including prognostic variables as covariates can increase the precision of the effect estimate. This means that choosing covariates based on significance tests for baseline differences might lead to omissions of important covariates and, less importantly, to inclusion of irrelevant covariates in the analysis. We used data from four supermarket trials on the effects of pricing strategies on fruit and vegetables purchases, to show that results from fully adjusted analyses sometimes do appreciably differ from results from analyses adjusted for significant baseline differences only. We propose to adjust for known or anticipated important prognostic variables. These could or should be pre-specified in trial protocols. Subsequently, authors should report results from the fully adjusted as well as crude analyses, especially for dichotomous and time to event data.SummaryBased on our arguments, which were illustrated by our findings, we propose that journals in and outside the field of nutrition behavior actively adopt the CONSORT 2010 statement on this topic by not publishing significance tests for baseline differences anymore.

Highlights

  • According to the CONSORT statement, significance testing of baseline differences in randomized controlled trials should not be performed

  • Summary: Based on our arguments, which were illustrated by our findings, we propose that journals in and outside the field of nutrition behavior actively adopt the CONSORT 2010 statement on this topic by not publishing significance tests for baseline differences anymore

  • Summary We have discussed that testing for baseline differences serves no purpose and can be misleading, especially because some researchers still think that these tests are the basis for choosing covariates in their analyses

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Summary

Introduction

According to the CONSORT statement, significance testing of baseline differences in randomized controlled trials should not be performed. According to this recommendation in the CONSORT statement, “significance testing of baseline de Boer et al International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity (2015) 12:4 All of these reviews focused on the leading general medical journals not all on the same ones. In the last few years we have carried out several webbased and one real-life randomized controlled supermarket trials on the effect of several pricing strategies on food purchases These have all been published in journals within the field of nutrition behavior, of which two in this journal [10,11,12,13]. The discussions were resolved and we were initially able to convince all authors of the fact that it would be better not to include these tests This means that in our submitted papers we followed the CONSORT statement in not testing for baseline differences. We decided to add the tests and as a result they are included in all four of our publications

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