Parker Kitty, Eddy Saskia, Nunns Michael, Xiao ZhiMin, Ford Tamsin, Eldridge Sandra, Ukoumunne Obioha C
NIHR Applied Research Collaboration South West Peninsula, University of Exeter, Room 2.16, South Cloisters, St Luke's Campus, 79 Heavitree Rd, Exeter, EX1 2LU, UK.
Wolfson Institute of Population Health, Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry, Queen Mary University of London, London, UK.
Pilot Feasibility Stud. 2022 Jul 2;8(1):132. doi: 10.1186/s40814-022-01098-w.
The last 20 years have seen a marked increase in the use of cluster randomised trials (CRTs) in schools to evaluate interventions for improving pupil health outcomes. Schools have limited resources and participating in full-scale trials can be challenging and costly, given their main purpose is education. Feasibility studies can be used to identify challenges with implementing interventions and delivering trials. This systematic review summarises methodological characteristics and objectives of school-based cluster randomised feasibility studies in the United Kingdom (UK).
We systematically searched MEDLINE from inception to 31 December 2020. Eligible papers were school-based feasibility CRTs that included health outcomes measured on pupils.
Of 3285 articles identified, 24 were included. School-based feasibility CRTs have been increasingly used in the UK since the first publication in 2008. Five (21%) studies provided justification for the use of the CRT design. Three (13%) studies provided details of a formal sample size calculation, with only one of these allowing for clustering. The median (IQR; range) recruited sample size was 7.5 (4.5 to 9; 2 to 37) schools and 274 (179 to 557; 29 to 1567) pupils. The most common feasibility objectives were to estimate the potential effectiveness of the intervention (n = 17; 71%), assess acceptability of the intervention (n = 16; 67%), and estimate the recruitment/retention rates (n = 15; 63%). Only one study was used to assess whether cluster randomisation was appropriate, and none of the studies that randomised clusters before recruiting pupils assessed the possibility of recruitment bias. Besides potential effectiveness, cost-effectiveness, and the intra-cluster correlation coefficient, no studies quantified the precision of the feasibility parameter estimates.
Feasibility CRTs are increasingly used in schools prior to definitive trials of interventions for improving health in pupils. The average sample size of studies included in this review would be large enough to estimate pupil-level feasibility parameters (e.g., percentage followed up) with reasonable precision. The review highlights the need for clearer sample size justification and better reporting of the precision with which feasibility parameters are estimated. Better use could be made of feasibility CRTs to assess challenges that are specific to the cluster design.
PROSPERO: CRD42020218993.
在过去20年中,学校使用整群随机试验(CRT)来评估改善学生健康结果的干预措施的情况显著增加。学校资源有限,鉴于其主要目的是教育,参与全面试验可能具有挑战性且成本高昂。可行性研究可用于识别实施干预措施和开展试验时面临的挑战。本系统评价总结了英国基于学校的整群随机可行性研究的方法学特征和目标。
我们系统检索了MEDLINE数据库,检索时间从建库至2020年12月31日。符合条件的论文为基于学校的可行性CRT,其中包括对学生健康结果的测量。
在检索到的3285篇文章中,纳入了24篇。自2008年首次发表以来,基于学校的可行性CRT在英国的使用越来越多。五项(21%)研究为使用CRT设计提供了理由。三项(13%)研究提供了正式样本量计算的细节,其中只有一项考虑了聚类情况。纳入研究的样本量中位数(四分位间距;范围)为7.5所学校(4.5至9所;2至37所)和274名学生(179至557名;29至1567名)。最常见的可行性目标是估计干预措施的潜在效果(n = 17;71%)、评估干预措施的可接受性(n = 16;67%)以及估计招募/保留率(n = 15;63%)。只有一项研究用于评估整群随机化是否合适,并且在招募学生之前对群组进行随机化的研究中,没有一项评估招募偏差的可能性。除了潜在效果、成本效益和组内相关系数外,没有研究对可行性参数估计的精度进行量化。
在对改善学生健康的干预措施进行确定性试验之前,可行性CRT在学校中的使用越来越多。本评价纳入研究的平均样本量足以以合理精度估计学生层面的可行性参数(例如随访百分比)。该评价强调需要更明确的样本量理由说明以及更好地报告可行性参数估计的精度。可以更好地利用可行性CRT来评估整群设计特有的挑战。
PROSPERO:CRD42020218993。