Publication | Open Access
The use of baseline covariates in crossover studies
130
Citations
14
References
2009
Year
Treatment EffectQuasi-experimentSocial SciencesPsychologyBiasRandomized Controlled TrialStatisticsBaseline CovariatesCross-level BiasMeta-analysisCrossover TrialsCohort StudyRehabilitationMarginal Structural ModelsPhysical TherapyCross-sectional StudyCrossover SettingTime-varying ConfoundingMedicine
It is our experience that in many settings, crossover trials that have within-period baseline measurements are analyzed wrongly. A "conventional" analysis of covariance in this setting uses each baseline as a covariate for the following outcome variable in the same period but not for any other outcome. If used with random subject effects such an analysis leads to biased treatment comparisons; this is an example of cross-level bias. Using a postulated covariance structure that reflects the symmetry of the crossover setting, we quantify such bias and, at the same time, investigate potential gains and losses in efficiency through the use of the baselines. We then describe alternative methods of analysis that avoid the cross-level bias. The development is illustrated throughout with 2 example trials, one balanced and orthogonal and one highly unbalanced and nonorthogonal.
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