Frontiers in Neurology (Aug 2023)

Design issues in crossover trials involving patients with Parkinson’s disease

  • David Sparrow,
  • David Sparrow,
  • Deborah DeMolles,
  • Ornella Dubaz,
  • Ornella Dubaz,
  • Raymon Durso,
  • Bernard Rosner,
  • Bernard Rosner,
  • Bernard Rosner

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2023.1197281
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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Background and objectivesCrossover designs are frequently used to assess treatments for patients with Parkinson’s disease. Typically, two-period two-treatment trials include a washout period between the 2 periods and assume that the washout period is sufficiently long to eliminate carryover effects. A complementary strategy might be to jointly model carryover and treatment effects, though this has rarely been done in Parkinson’s disease crossover studies. The primary objective of this research is to demonstrate a modeling approach that assesses treatment and carryover effects in one unified mixed model analysis and to examine how it performs in a simulation study and a real data analysis example, as compared to other data analytic approaches used in Parkinson’s disease crossover studies.MethodsWe examined how three different methods of analysis (standard crossover t-test, mixed model with a carryover term included in model statement, and mixed model with no carryover term) performed in a simulation study and illustrated the methods in a real data example in Parkinson’s disease.ResultsThe simulation study based on the presence of a carryover effect indicated that mixed models with a carryover term and an unstructured correlation matrix provided unbiased estimates of treatment effect and appropriate type I error. The methods are illustrated in a real data example involving Parkinson’s disease. Our literature review revealed that a majority of crossover studies included a washout period but did not assess whether the washout was sufficiently long to eliminate the possibility of carryover.DiscussionWe recommend using a mixed model with a carryover term and an unstructured correlation matrix to obtain unbiased estimates of treatment effect.

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