Incomplete Stepped Wedge Designs: Methods for Study Planning and Analysis [Methods Study], United States, 2007-2023 (ICPSR 39743)
In a stepped-wedge cluster randomized trial, or SW-CRT, researchers compare new treatments to standard treatments in groups of patients, such as patients at different clinics, to look at the treatments' effectiveness. They assign groups by chance to switch from the standard to new treatment at different time points until all groups have received the new treatment. The different time points to switch treatments are called steps.
SW-CRTs take time and resources. If researchers know they can't collect data on all groups and all steps in a SW-CRT, they can plan to use an incomplete SW-CRT design. In incomplete SW-CRTs, researchers plan the study knowing that some clinics or steps will have missing data. But researchers need better guidance for planning incomplete SW-CRTs that still get accurate results.
Also, current methods for planning how many patients and groups should take part in SW-CRTs don't work well for large studies. They also don't work well with certain types of outcomes, like yes or no outcomes; outcomes that have counts, like number of hospital visits; or continuous outcomes, like a score from 0 to 100.
In this study, the research team developed and tested new methods to design and analyze SW-CRTs with different patterns of planned missing data, large data sets, and different types of outcomes.