factorial designs

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Factorial Designs

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Factorial Designs. Background. Factorial designs are when different treatments are evaluated within the same randomised trial. A factorial design has a number of important advantages. Advantages. Two trials for the price of one. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Factorial Designs

Factorial Designs

Page 2: Factorial Designs

Background Factorial designs are when

different treatments are evaluated within the same randomised trial.

A factorial design has a number of important advantages.

Page 3: Factorial Designs

Advantages Two trials for the price of one. Can test for an ‘interaction’

between treatments – does a treatment work even better in the presence of another therapy?

Page 4: Factorial Designs

Disadvantages Can be more complicated to

undertake leading to a higher potential for error.

Interactions can mean some of the sample is lost, which will reduce power for main comparisons.

Page 5: Factorial Designs

Example Waters et al. Examined the use of

HRT and antioxidant vitamins for treatment of coronary heart disease.

Observational data suggest a benefit of HRT and antioxidant vitamins.

Sensible to examine effects of both.

Page 6: Factorial Designs

Factorial Design

HRT and Placebo Vitamins

HRT and Vitamins

Placebo HRT Vitamins

Vitamins + Placebo HRT

Page 7: Factorial Designs

Analysis The analysis treats the study as

two separate trials. All women who got HRT would be compared with those who did not. Likewise all those given vitamins would be compared with who were not given vitamins.

Page 8: Factorial Designs

HRT and Vitamin Trial Over 400 women randomise to the

4 treatment arms. Outcomes included surrogate

measures (lipid levels angiograms) plus ‘real’ outcomes – death MIs.

Page 9: Factorial Designs

Results Both treatments INCREASED the

risk of MI and death. NO interaction with treatments

suggesting that the risk of death is additive.

Page 10: Factorial Designs

WAVE Trial This trial showed YET AGAIN the

harmful effect of HRT AND antioxidant vitamins.

Page 11: Factorial Designs

RECORD TRIAL RECORD trial is a factorial trial of

calcium with or without vitamin D. Key question is whether vitamin D

is effective alone or NEEDS calcium to work.

Factorial design is specified to look for an interaction.

Page 12: Factorial Designs

Record Trial The interaction is important because

there are biologically plausible reasons for both treatments to work better in the presence of each other (I.e a positive interaction).

Because vitamin D is so inexpensive it is important to know if this effective on its own.

Page 13: Factorial Designs

More complications Basic factorial is 2 X 2 but can be

increased by infinite number of factors.

UK BEAM trial (backpain) uses a 3 x 2 factorial to test: exercise; GP care; manipulation; exercise plus manipulation.

Did include another factor making it a 3 x 2 x 2 design.

Page 14: Factorial Designs

BEAM trial Factorial design enabled exercise

and manipulation questions to be answered in the same trial.

Also enables us to look for interactions between treatments.

Page 15: Factorial Designs

Factorial Questionnaire Trial Puffer et al undertook a factorial

trial comparing single sided questionnaires vs double with one large questionnaire vs 3 separate questionnaires.

Outcome was response rates.

Page 16: Factorial Designs

Underuse of Factorial trials Factorial trials could be more widely used

as they can answer two questions within the same trial, particularly if there is no reason to suspect an interaction.

Factorial trials also enable us to ‘tease’ out the different treatment effects. For example, fall prevention programmes are multifactorial and in standard trial we end up not knowing what produces the main effects.

Page 17: Factorial Designs

Systematic Review of Factorial Trials

Are interactions common in factorial trials? A review of 44 trials found only 1 trial

where an interaction would have given the ‘wrong’ answer and 7 trials where there were indications of an interaction (only 2 were statistically significant).

Interactions are relatively unusual and therefore factorial trials are probably an efficient trial approach.

McAlister et al. JAMA 2003;289:2545.

Page 18: Factorial Designs

Split plot design A split plot design is a special form

of factorial design, which mixes cluster and individual randomisation.

Page 19: Factorial Designs

SAPPHIRE: example of a split plot design.

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Page 20: Factorial Designs

Analysis of split plot The same as for a factorial. Will be

treated as two separate trials. Again giving us two trials for the price of one.

Page 21: Factorial Designs

Summary Factorial trials could and should be

more widely used. Caution if there is a chance of a

negative interaction one may need to avoid them.

Can be administratively more difficult.