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A methodological review of randomised n-of-1 trials

A methodological review of randomised n-of-1 trials
A methodological review of randomised n-of-1 trials
Background: n-of-1 trials are a type of crossover trial designed to optimise the evaluation of health technologies in individual patients. This trial design may be considered for the evaluation of health technologies in rare conditions where fewer patients are available to take part in research. This review describes the characteristics of randomised n-of-1 trials conducted over the span of 12 years, including how the n-of-1 design has been employed to study both rare and non-rare conditions.

Methods: databases and clinical trials registries were searched for articles including “n-of-1” in the title between 2011 and 2023. The reference lists of reviews identified by the searches were searched for any additional eligible articles. Randomised n-of-1 trials were selected for inclusion and data were extracted on a range of design, population, and analysis characteristics. Descriptive statistics were produced for all variables.

Results: we identified 74 studies meeting our eligibility criteria, 13 of which (17.6%) were conducted in rare condi- tions. They were conducted in a range of clinical areas with the most common being neurological conditions (n = 16, 21.6%). The median (Q1, Q3) number of participants randomised was 9 (4, 20) and 12 trials (16.2%) involved a single patient only. Forty-six (62.2%) trials evaluated pharmaceutical interventions and 49 (66.2%) trials were placebo con- trolled. Trials had a median (Q1, Q3) of six (4, 8) periods and 61 (82.4%) compared two health technologies. Fifty-seven (77.0%) trials incorporated blinding and 32 (43.2%) had a washout period. Forty-nine trials (66.2%) used patient- reported outcome measures (PROMs) to assess the primary outcome. Trials used a range of approaches to analysis and 48 (64.9%) combined data from multiple patients. The characteristics of the n-of-1 trials conducted in rare condi- tions were generally consistent with those in non-rare conditions.

Conclusions: n-of-1 trials are still underused and the application of the n-of-1 design for the evaluation of health technologies for rare diseases has been particularly limited. We have summarised the characteristics of randomised n-of-1 trials in rare and non-rare conditions. We hope that it can inform researchers in the design of future n-of-1 stud- ies. Further work is required to provide guidance on specific design considerations, implementation, and statistical analysis of these studies.

Trial registration: not applicable.
clinical trials, crossover, n-of-1 trials, placebo, Placebo, Clinical trials, Crossover
1745-6215
Hawkesworth, Olivia
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Chatters, Robin
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Julious, Steven
f43c38eb-8aaa-4f4c-a770-a68bc2321360
Cook, Andrew
ab9c7bb3-974a-4db9-b3c2-9942988005d5
Biggs, Katie
d8fcc4ae-aa98-4e30-a0d3-ea55a095fbc7
Solariman, Kiera
efca59ae-bfc7-43c7-b00c-64486cc7cf46
Quah, Michael C.H.
70b535d2-9c49-43f9-ba26-a3290a4ef5b4
Cheong, Sxe Chang
1c90ee1d-1ca0-41b9-8c78-517b7e991653
Hawkesworth, Olivia
d9f205af-d414-4741-9fa3-5d343ea73115
Chatters, Robin
751cd9f6-f06f-4f96-b3e9-ece8aed53468
Julious, Steven
f43c38eb-8aaa-4f4c-a770-a68bc2321360
Cook, Andrew
ab9c7bb3-974a-4db9-b3c2-9942988005d5
Biggs, Katie
d8fcc4ae-aa98-4e30-a0d3-ea55a095fbc7
Solariman, Kiera
efca59ae-bfc7-43c7-b00c-64486cc7cf46
Quah, Michael C.H.
70b535d2-9c49-43f9-ba26-a3290a4ef5b4
Cheong, Sxe Chang
1c90ee1d-1ca0-41b9-8c78-517b7e991653

Hawkesworth, Olivia, Chatters, Robin, Julious, Steven, Cook, Andrew, Biggs, Katie, Solariman, Kiera, Quah, Michael C.H. and Cheong, Sxe Chang (2024) A methodological review of randomised n-of-1 trials. Trials, 25 (1), [263]. (doi:10.1186/s13063-024-08100-1).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: n-of-1 trials are a type of crossover trial designed to optimise the evaluation of health technologies in individual patients. This trial design may be considered for the evaluation of health technologies in rare conditions where fewer patients are available to take part in research. This review describes the characteristics of randomised n-of-1 trials conducted over the span of 12 years, including how the n-of-1 design has been employed to study both rare and non-rare conditions.

Methods: databases and clinical trials registries were searched for articles including “n-of-1” in the title between 2011 and 2023. The reference lists of reviews identified by the searches were searched for any additional eligible articles. Randomised n-of-1 trials were selected for inclusion and data were extracted on a range of design, population, and analysis characteristics. Descriptive statistics were produced for all variables.

Results: we identified 74 studies meeting our eligibility criteria, 13 of which (17.6%) were conducted in rare condi- tions. They were conducted in a range of clinical areas with the most common being neurological conditions (n = 16, 21.6%). The median (Q1, Q3) number of participants randomised was 9 (4, 20) and 12 trials (16.2%) involved a single patient only. Forty-six (62.2%) trials evaluated pharmaceutical interventions and 49 (66.2%) trials were placebo con- trolled. Trials had a median (Q1, Q3) of six (4, 8) periods and 61 (82.4%) compared two health technologies. Fifty-seven (77.0%) trials incorporated blinding and 32 (43.2%) had a washout period. Forty-nine trials (66.2%) used patient- reported outcome measures (PROMs) to assess the primary outcome. Trials used a range of approaches to analysis and 48 (64.9%) combined data from multiple patients. The characteristics of the n-of-1 trials conducted in rare condi- tions were generally consistent with those in non-rare conditions.

Conclusions: n-of-1 trials are still underused and the application of the n-of-1 design for the evaluation of health technologies for rare diseases has been particularly limited. We have summarised the characteristics of randomised n-of-1 trials in rare and non-rare conditions. We hope that it can inform researchers in the design of future n-of-1 stud- ies. Further work is required to provide guidance on specific design considerations, implementation, and statistical analysis of these studies.

Trial registration: not applicable.

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More information

Submitted date: 6 April 2023
Accepted/In Press date: 9 April 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 16 April 2024
Published date: December 2024
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s) 2024.
Keywords: clinical trials, crossover, n-of-1 trials, placebo, Placebo, Clinical trials, Crossover

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 489294
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/489294
ISSN: 1745-6215
PURE UUID: 7b2fe264-7bbc-4556-ba90-b903c5d1d354
ORCID for Andrew Cook: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6680-439X

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Date deposited: 19 Apr 2024 16:36
Last modified: 21 May 2024 01:40

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Contributors

Author: Olivia Hawkesworth
Author: Robin Chatters
Author: Steven Julious
Author: Andrew Cook ORCID iD
Author: Katie Biggs
Author: Kiera Solariman
Author: Michael C.H. Quah
Author: Sxe Chang Cheong

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