Intention to Treat Flashcards
What is the intention to treat principle?
Participants must be counted in the groups to which they were initially assigned, regardless of whether they were compliant with the intervention.
Includes those who withdraw.
Rationale behind intention to treat principle?
In an RCT one sets out to estimate broader effects of allocating intervention to a group and not the narrow effects of those who comply.
In reality, few people adhere to treatments strictly.
What does intention to treat principle give us?
Conservative estimate of treatment effect compared with what would be expected in ideal world of full compliance
Advantages of intention to treat principle
Makes results from RCT more generalisable and pragmatic
When might intention to treat principle not be suitable?
RCTs where investigation is of biological effects of drugs
Impact of ITT analysis in non inferiority trials?
Will favour equality due to dilution
When is ITT difficult to interpret?
If number of crossovers are high
Ways of dealing with missing data
Test the difference
Use available data
Imputation of data
Statistical methods
What is test the difference?
Test for difference between drop out group and available subject group.
Baseline characteristics if comparable can substantiate loss without further adjustment
Ways of using available data to deal with missing data
LOCF
Worst case scenario analysis
What does LOCF stand for?
Last observation carried forward
When is LOCF useful?
Only for longitudinal observations where continuous scales are used
Disadvantages of LOCF
Many psychiatric diseases have natural course of remission - LOCF does not allow for this’
‘Too good’ for controls and ‘too stringent’ for patient group
What is worst case scenario analysis?
Assumes that those lost to follow-up did not improve on trial intervention. Hence, data of treatment failure subjects used as proxy.
When is worst case scenario analysis used?
As part of sensitivity analysis