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Impact of CONSORT extension for cluster randomised trials on quality of reporting and study methodology: review of random sample of 300 trials, 2000-8

BMJ 2011; 343 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.d5886 (Published 26 September 2011) Cite this as: BMJ 2011;343:d5886
  1. N M Ivers, family physician1,
  2. M Taljaard, scientist2,
  3. S Dixon, postdoctoral fellow3,
  4. C Bennett, research coordinator2,
  5. A McRae, research director4,
  6. J Taleban, PhD candidate5,
  7. Z Skea, research fellow6,
  8. J C Brehaut, scientist2,
  9. R F Boruch, professor of education and statistics7,
  10. M P Eccles, professor of clinical effectiveness8,
  11. J M Grimshaw, senior scientist2,
  12. C Weijer, professor of philosophy and medicine9,
  13. M Zwarenstein, senior scientist10,
  14. A Donner, professor of epidemiology and biostatistics11
  1. 1Women’s College Hospital, 76 Grenville Street, Toronto, ON, Canada M5S 1B2
  2. 2Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Clinical Epidemiology Program, Ottawa Hospital, Civic Campus, 1053 Carling Avenue, Ottawa, ON
  3. 3Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Schulich School of Medicine and Density, University of Western Ontario, London, ON
  4. 4Division of Emergency Medicine, University of Calgary, Foothills Medical Centre, 1403-29 Street NW, Calgary, AB
  5. 5Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of Western Ontario, London, ON
  6. 6Health Services Research Unit, Health Sciences Building, University of Aberdeen, Foresterhill, Aberdeen AB25 2ZD, UK
  7. 7Graduate School of Education, University of Pennsylvania, 3700 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA
  8. 8Institute of Health and Society, Newcastle University, Baddiley-Clark Building, Newcastle upon Tyne
  9. 9Rotman Institute of Philosophy, Department of Philosophy, University of Western Ontario, London, ON
  10. 10Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences and Sunnybrook Research Institute, G106 - 2075 Bayview Avenue, Toronto, ON
  11. 11Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry, Kresge Building, University of Western Ontario, London, ON
  1. Correspondence to: N M Ivers noah.ivers{at}utoronto.ca
  • Accepted 9 August 2011

Abstract

Objective To assess the impact of the 2004 extension of the CONSORT guidelines on the reporting and methodological quality of cluster randomised trials.

Design Methodological review of 300 randomly sampled cluster randomised trials. Two reviewers independently abstracted 14 criteria related to quality of reporting and four methodological criteria specific to cluster randomised trials. We compared manuscripts published before CONSORT (2000-4) with those published after CONSORT (2005-8). We also investigated differences by journal impact factor, type of journal, and trial setting.

Data sources A validated Medline search strategy.

Eligibility criteria for selecting studies Cluster randomised trials published in English language journals, 2000-8.

Results There were significant improvements in five of 14 reporting criteria: identification as cluster randomised; justification for cluster randomisation; reporting whether outcome assessments were blind; reporting the number of clusters randomised; and reporting the number of clusters lost to follow-up. No significant improvements were found in adherence to methodological criteria. Trials conducted in clinical rather than non-clinical settings and studies published in medical journals with higher impact factor or general medical journals were more likely to adhere to recommended reporting and methodological criteria overall, but there was no evidence that improvements after publication of the CONSORT extension for cluster trials were more likely in trials conducted in clinical settings nor in trials published in either general medical journals or in higher impact factor journals.

Conclusion The quality of reporting of cluster randomised trials improved in only a few aspects since the publication of the extension of CONSORT for cluster randomised trials, and no improvements at all were observed in essential methodological features. Overall, the adherence to reporting and methodological guidelines for cluster randomised trials remains suboptimal, and further efforts are needed to improve both reporting and methodology.

Introduction

In recent years, increasing attention has been paid to the importance of good reporting practices as they relate to the potential utility of a manuscript.1 The CONSORT (consolidated standards of reporting trials) statement, originally published in 1996 and updated in 2001 and 2010, provides authors and editors with a checklist for a minimum set of recommendations for reporting the trial design, analysis, and results.2 Although certain inadequacies remain common, the quality of reporting of randomised controlled trials in medical journals seems to be improving over time.3 A recent systematic review indicated that the CONSORT statement has played an important role in this progression.4

Unfortunately, reviews of published cluster randomised trials (see box 1) have repeatedly found important shortcomings in their methodological conduct and reporting.5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 For example, a review of 152 cluster randomised trials published 1997-2000 found that most of them did not adhere to recommended methods for cluster randomised trials.8 To help address this problem, an extension for the original CONSORT guideline, specifically addressing the unique methodological features of cluster randomised trials, was published in 2004.19 In this extension, the authors altered the recommendations for 15 of 22 items on the original CONSORT checklist to emphasise the additional requirements for adequate methodological conduct and reporting of cluster randomised trials. Encouragingly, a review of 34 primary care trials published in seven major medical journals during the two years after the extension found that most trials properly accounted for clustering in the sample size and in the analysis.7 Nevertheless, that review still found that cluster randomised trials often had suboptimal reporting to the extent that both internal and external validity were uncertain.7 For example, blinding of participants was not reported clearly in 33% and blinding of outcome assessors was not reported clearly in 38%. Such factors are included in the CONSORT checklist for a good reason: lack of blinding can lead to substantially inflated estimates of effect,20 21 making clear reporting essential for interpretation. Although blinding of participants is often impossible in cluster randomised trials, especially in those evaluating interventions to change behaviour, we believe that inability to blind trial participants should not be invoked as an excuse for poor reporting.

Box 1 Brief description of cluster randomised trials

  • Cluster randomised trials differ from classic (individual level) randomised controlled trials in that the unit of randomisation includes a group (or cluster) of patients—such as a medical practice, hospital, or entire community—rather than an individual patient

  • Cluster randomised trials are often done for pragmatic purposes (such as in public health trials where the intervention is directed at the whole community) or to avoid contamination of the treatment arm (such as in health services trials where patients in the intervention group share a healthcare provider)

  • Individuals nested within a cluster might be more similar than individuals from other clusters; this “intracluster correlation” must be accounted for in the design and analysis

  • Failing to account for the intracluster correlation in the calculation of the sample size can lead to an underpowered trial, and failing to account for it during the analysis can lead to spuriously significant results

  • Numerous other challenges separate cluster randomised trials from individual level trials (for example, loss to follow-up of clusters can substantially reduce power compared with loss of individuals)

Given that cluster trials are increasingly common but carry unique risks for bias, adequate reporting is even more important. The CONSORT extension for cluster randomised trials might have had a positive impact on reporting; our group has recently shown that more reports of cluster randomised trials now mention the clustered nature of the trial in the title or abstract, or both.22 We performed a secondary analysis of data originally abstracted to investigate the unique ethical issues that arise as a result of randomising groups rather than individuals.23 Using data from a random sample of published cluster randomised trials from 2000-8, we examined trends in the reporting quality of these trials. In addition to investigating whether there was an improvement in reporting of certain items recommended by the CONSORT extension, we assessed whether there were improvements in essential methodological requirements for cluster randomised trials. To do so, we made a distinction between reporting in the manuscript (such as presence of a sample size calculation) and proper methodological conduct (such as accounting for the intracluster correlation in that calculation). Finally, we examined whether trends in trial reporting and methods varied according to characteristics of the study or journal.

Methods

Search strategy and article selection

We used a previously published electronic search strategy (box 2) to identify reports of cluster randomised trials in health research, published in English language journals from 2000 to 2008.22 As described in more detail elsewhere,22 23 the search strategy was derived and validated with an ideal set of cluster randomised trials identified from manual examination of a large sample of health journals, as well as an independent sample of cluster randomised trials included in previously published reviews. The sensitivity of the search strategy against the ideal set of trials, defined as the proportion of cluster randomised trials that are retrieved by the search, was 90.1%.

Box 2: Medline search strategy to identify cluster randomised trials

  • 1. randomized controlled trial.pt.

  • 2. animals/

  • 3. humans/

  • 4. 2 NOT (2 AND 3)

  • 5. 1 NOT 4

  • 6. cluster$ adj2 randomi$.tw.

  • 7. ((communit$ adj2 intervention$) OR (communit$ adj2 randomi$)).tw.

  • 8. group$ randomi$.tw.

  • 9. 6 OR 7 OR 8

  • 10. intervention?.tw.

  • 11. cluster analysis/

  • 12. health promotion/

  • 13. program evaluation/

  • 14. health education/

  • 15. 10 OR 11 OR 12 OR 13 OR 14

  • 16. 9 OR 15

  • 17. 16 AND 5

Reports identified by the search strategy were sorted in random order with a computer generated random number, and two reviewers (MT and CB) screened titles and abstracts of reports (as well as full text when necessary) to identify cluster randomised trials that met our eligibility criteria. Both reviewers initially screened reports to assess agreement in the identification of eligible trials. After reaching satisfactory agreement (defined as κ≥0.85), reports were screened independently until the target sample size of 300 trials was reached (fig 1). An article was included if it was clearly the main report of a cluster randomised trial. We excluded studies identified by the trial authors as “pilot” or “feasibility” studies, trial protocols, trials randomising households or dyads of different individuals, short communications or conference proceedings, trials with further allocation of individuals within clusters, those using quasi-randomised designs, and studies that reported only baseline findings or secondary analyses of trials. We considered a study as a “secondary analysis” if it was identified as such by the study authors, referenced the main publication elsewhere, or presented only secondary outcomes.

Figure1

Fig 1 Identification of sample of 300 cluster randomised trials

Data abstraction

The research team developed and pilot tested the data abstraction instrument used for the larger project examining ethical issues in cluster randomised trials. This was then applied to a sample of 21 cluster randomised trials to calibrate reviewers. Six reviewers (MT, AMcR, CB, SD, JT, ZS) independently abstracted these 21 trials. Differences were identified and resolved by discussion. The rest of the trials were then abstracted independently by rotating pairs of reviewers. After each set of 20 trials had been abstracted, discrepancies were reviewed within the pair and resolved by consensus. If differences could not be resolved, one reviewer (MT) was the arbitrator.

Outcomes

Similar to the approach taken in a previous review,8 we considered criteria relating to both reporting and methodological quality of the trials. Reporting quality was assessed on the basis of the presence or absence of a subset of criteria in the CONSORT extension to cluster randomised trials; methodological quality was assessed on the basis of four methodological requirements specific to the conduct of such trials. These are related to the criteria described in the CONSORT extension checklist, but they have been abstracted to assess appropriateness of trial conduct rather than simply trial reporting. Table 1 compares the criteria in the CONSORT checklist and the variables assessed as outcomes in the present study.

Table 1

 Comparison of recommendations in extension to CONSORT for cluster randomised trials and variables abstracted for present study

View this table:

Reporting criteria

Although there are 22 items listed in the CONSORT reporting checklist for cluster randomised trials, some are difficult to abstract in a standardised fashion and others can be broken down into multiple variables. As part of the larger project investigating ethical issues in cluster randomised trials, we abstracted 14 CONSORT related reporting variables. The choice not to abstract all CONSORT criteria represented a compromise between comprehensiveness and feasibility, given the large sample size involved. For every trial report, we classed each of the following criteria as “reported” or “not reported”:

  • Clear identification of cluster randomised in the title or abstract of the report

  • Explicit provision of a rationale or justification for using a clustered design (such as avoidance of contamination)

  • Reporting of clearly defined primary outcome measures

  • Presentation of calculation of sample size

  • Identification of who enrolled participants in the trial (excluding trials with no enrolment of participants—for example, trials using data from secondary sources only)

  • Reporting of the blinding of participants

  • Reporting of the blinding of administrators or outcome assessors, or both

  • Presentation of a clearly defined approach to analysis

  • Reporting of the number of clusters randomised to each arm

  • Reporting of the number of clusters that withdrew

  • Reporting of the number of clusters that were lost to follow-up

  • Reporting of the size of clusters in each arm

  • Reporting of the number of individuals lost to follow-up

  • Reporting of an estimated intracluster correlation (excluding trials using a pair matched design or those where the analysis was at the cluster level).

Methodological criteria

We abstracted four criteria related to the appropriate conduct of a cluster randomised trial:

  • Whether or not the sample size calculation (if reported) accounted for clustering.24 A trial was classified as meeting the sample size requirement if the sample size calculation was presented and clearly accounted for clustering (such as by using the intracluster correlation, coefficient of variation, or cluster level summary statistics).

  • Whether or not the analysis accounted for clustering.24 A trial was classified as meeting the analysis requirement if the method of analysis was reported and was clearly appropriate for the clustered design (such as by adjusting for the intracluster correlation, using a mixed effects regression analysis, or using cluster level summary statistics).

  • Whether any attempt was made beyond simple (unrestricted) randomisation to attain balance at baseline—cluster randomised trials have a greater risk of chance imbalances at baseline compared with trials randomising individual patients because of the limited number of clusters that can feasibly be randomised in any one trial. Restricted randomisation (using stratification, pair matching, or minimisation) to limit the chance of baseline imbalances is therefore recommended.19

  • As in a previous review,8 we abstracted whether the number of clusters randomised per arm was greater than four as trials randomising fewer than four clusters per arm might be severely limited in their statistical power.25 Unlike each of the variables above, this criterion was not explicitly recommended in the CONSORT extension for cluster trials.

Study and journal characteristics

We assessed the study setting as well as the type of journal and its impact factor for each manuscript. To distinguish between trials conducted in clinical settings or non-clinical settings we assessed the unit of allocation. We classified the study setting as “clinical” when the unit of allocation was a healthcare provider, teams of healthcare providers, or healthcare organisations (such as a primary care practice or group of practices, hospital or hospital wards, nursing home) or if the trial was conducted in a healthcare organisation; the remainder of the trials (such as those randomising schools or classrooms; residential areas; worksites; and sports teams, clubs, churches, or other social groups) were classified as “non-clinical.” We obtained journal impact factors from journal citation reports (ISI Web of Science, 2009). When a journal’s ranking was unavailable, we used the impact ranking of the open access SMImago journal and country rank database, if available.26 This ranking is calculated with a similar formula and is strongly correlated with the journal citation impact factor.27 We used journal citation reports from ISI Web of Knowledge to identify general medical journals according to those classified as “medicine, general and internal.”

Analysis

Results were summarised with frequencies and percentages for categorical variables and medians and interquartile ranges for continuous or ordinal variables. For our primary objective of determining whether there has been an improvement in reporting and methodological quality over time, we compared the proportions of manuscripts meeting the recommended criteria published before CONSORT (2000-4) with those published after CONSORT (2005-6 and 2007-8) using Cochran-Armitage tests for trend. As seen in figure 2, the number of citations of the extension increased linearly over this timeframe, and we therefore chose two cut-off points to account for the expected gradual dissemination of the guidelines over time. To quantify the magnitude of change in adherence over time, we calculated the absolute change in the proportion of trials meeting each recommendation from before to after CONSORT, together with 95% asymptotic confidence intervals (or exact confidence intervals in the case of small expected frequencies). We also created a summary score for the 14 reporting criteria, representing the proportion of items adhered to in the report. Differences in the summary score over time were analysed with one way analysis of variation (ANOVA) with publication year as a three level categorical variable. For our secondary objective (to investigate variations in adherence to reporting and methodological criteria according to study or journal characteristics) we repeated the above analyses after classifying trial setting as clinical versus non-clinical and after classifying journals as higher (above the median) versus lower impact factors and as general medical journals versus other. All analyses were carried out with SAS v.9.2 with a level of significance set at α=0.05.

Figure2

Fig 2 Number of citations (assessed with SCOPUS) of CONSORT extension for cluster randomised trials by year of publication

Results

Table 2 shows characteristics of the 300 randomly selected trials included in the review. Trials were published in 150 different journals; 103 (34%) were published in general medical journals. Journal impact factors ranged from 0.45 to 50; the median impact factor was 2.9. The median impact factor of the general medical journals was 9.2.

Table 2

 Characteristics of 300 cluster randomised trials included in review of studies for compliance with CONSORT extension. Figures are numbers (percentage) of trials unless stated otherwise

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Table 3 shows the percentage of trials that met each of the reporting criteria before and after CONSORT, together with the tests for trend and confidence intervals for absolute change in adherence. Five of the 14 reporting criteria showed a significant trend for improvement: reporting on loss of clusters to follow-up (P=0.01); identification as “cluster randomised” in title or abstract (P=0.038); providing a justification for the clustered design (P=0.038); reporting whether or not outcome assessors had been blinded (P=0.019); and reporting of the number of clusters randomised (P=0.035). Among these criteria, the absolute improvement in adherence ranged from 6.6% (95% confidence interval −1.1% to 14.3%) for reporting of number of clusters randomised to 13.9% (3.1% to 24.7%) for reporting whether outcome assessors were blinded. Notably, there was no improvement in the proportion of trials clearly identifying a primary outcome, with fewer than half of trials overall meeting this important criterion; moreover, about half of trials overall failed to report a sample size calculation and this does not seem to have improved over time. Based on the summary score, there was minimal improvement in overall reporting, with papers from 2000-4 reporting a mean of 60% of criteria, those from 2005-6 reporting 62%, and those from 2007-8 reporting 66% (P=0.09 for trend).

Table 3

 Adherence (number (percentage)) to standard criteria for reporting and methodology for cluster randomised trials, overall and before and after publication of CONSORT extension for cluster randomised trials

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We found no trend over time in the methodological criteria that we chose to abstract. Overall, 56% of trials used restricted randomisation, 70% accounted for clustering in analysis, 60% of those presenting sample size calculations accounted for clustering in the design, and 86% allocated more than four clusters per arm.

Tables 4, 5, and 6 show the results of our secondary analyses, which examined the role of study and publication characteristics on improvement in quality of reporting and methodological conduct before and after the publication of the CONSORT extension for cluster randomised trials. In particular, table 4 shows that general medical journals performed at a higher standard overall for nearly every criterion with the exception of justification for clustering. When considering the change from before to after CONSORT, the general medical journals showed significant improvement in only one criterion: reporting of number of clusters lost to follow-up (absolute improvement 17%, 3% to 31%). No significant improvements in any of the methodological criteria were observed in trials published in either the general medical or other journals. Based on the summary score, trials published in general medical journals reported a mean of 66.5% of criteria before and a mean of 71.6% of criteria after the CONSORT extension was published (absolute improvement 5%, −1.7% to 12%), while trials published in other journals reported a mean of 56% before and 60% after (absolute improvement 4.3%, −1.1% to 9.7%).

Table 4

 Change in adherence (number (percentage)) to standard criteria for reporting and methodology for cluster randomised trials by journal type, before and after publication of CONSORT extension for cluster randomised trials

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Table 5 shows similar findings: higher impact journals tended to score better in most reporting and methodological criteria. Higher impact factor journals showed significant improvements in two of 14 reporting criteria and in one of four methodological criteria, while lower impact factor journals improved in two reporting criteria. Based on the summary score, trials published in higher impact factor journals reported a mean of 66.0% of criteria before and a mean of 68.3% of criteria after the CONSORT extension was published (absolute improvement 2.2%, −3.6% to 8.3%), while trials published in lower impact factor journals reported a mean of 54.4% before and 59.2% after (absolute improvement 4.8%, −1.4% to 11.0%).

Table 5

 Change in adherence (number (percentage)) to standard criteria for reporting and methodology for cluster randomised trials by journal impact factor*, before and after publication of CONSORT extension for cluster randomised trials

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The results in table 6 follow the same pattern: trials conducted in clinical settings tended to meet more of the reporting and methodological criteria than trials conducted in non-clinical settings. Trials from clinical settings showed significant improvements in one reporting criterion and one methodological criterion, while the trials from non-clinical settings did not show significant improvements in any of the criteria. Based on the summary score, trials conducted in clinical settings reported a mean of 63.3% of criteria before and a mean of 67.8% of criteria after the CONSORT extension was published (absolute improvement 4.6%, −1.1% to 10.3%), while trials published in non-clinical settings reported a mean of 55.3% before and 58.2% after (absolute improvement 2.9%, −3.7% to 9.4%).

Table 6

 Change in adherence (number (percentage)) to standard criteria for reporting and methodology for cluster randomised trials by trial setting, before and after publication of CONSORT extension for cluster randomised trials

View this table:

Discussion

Statement of principal findings

There have been significant improvements over time in only five of 14 CONSORT related reporting criteria for cluster randomised trials. In particular, reporting whether outcome assessments were blind, as well as the number of clusters randomised, withdrawn, and lost to follow-up per arm has considerable implications for assessment of internal validity.28 Although the absolute improvements were small, the trends represent an important accomplishment because through improved clarity of reporting, readers can make better judgments regarding the risks of bias for any given study.1 While this progress is welcome, the pace remains slow, and there remains considerable room for further improvement. The findings from our review suggest that future updates of the CONSORT extension for cluster trials should be accompanied by additional interventions to help investigators and editors improve the standards of these trials.

Of the five reporting criteria that had a greater than 75% adherence rate, four can easily be summarised in a well prepared cluster-patient flow diagram or in a table summarising baseline data for cluster and individual level variables, or both. Moreover, of the five criteria that showed significant improvements over time, two related to flow of clusters-patients (reporting of numbers of clusters randomised and lost to follow-up). Therefore, encouraging the use of such flow diagrams (as recommended by the CONSORT extension) seems to have been successful in improving reporting of enrolment and losses of patients and clusters. Even for trials conducted in clinical settings and published in journals with higher impact factors, however, there remains a great need for further improvements in other reporting criteria, possibly through the development of similar devices within manuscripts that facilitate the communication of key information. Studies conducted in clinical rather than non-clinical settings and published in general medical and other higher impact journals were more likely to meet the criteria for both reporting and methodological conduct, but the standards of these studies failed to improve significantly in many areas after the CONSORT extension was published. More stringent editorial policies might be required to bring about substantial improvement. Although journal editorial policies that promote CONSORT are associated with improved reporting,29 a recent survey of 165 high impact journals found that only 3% refer to the extension to cluster trials in the online instructions for authors.30

Some CONSORT related variables might be poorly reported because they are deemed unnecessary by investigators or editors. For example, justification for conducting a cluster level randomisation might be considered unnecessary in cases when the intervention itself is at the level of the cluster. In a post hoc analysis in which we excluded trials with interventions solely at the cluster level (n=99), however, the proportion reporting a justification remained low (33%). We agree with the authors of CONSORT that explicit justification is important because cluster randomised trials involve unique methodological challenges that require special attention during the design and analysis.19 For example, the intracluster correlation must be accounted for in both the sample size calculation and analysis; failure to clearly report whether this has been done leads to questions regarding the validity of the findings. Unfortunately, we found no evidence of significant improvement over time in four key methodological criteria. Indeed, the methodological quality of cluster randomised trial reports after publication of the CONSORT extension remains disappointingly poor; this is especially true for trials published in specialty (non-general) medicine journals.

Comparison with literature

Many previous authors have noted problems with the design, analysis, and reporting of cluster randomised trials. For example, the reporting of an intracluster correlation represents an important contribution to the literature, allowing future studies to plan for adequate power. Only 18% of the 300 manuscripts that we reviewed, however, reported an intracluster correlation (or 16% after we excluded trials with a pair matched design or those with analysis at the cluster level). This is higher than previous estimates of 4%8 and 8%.5 Our finding that only 31% of manuscripts provided a clear justification for using a cluster randomised design also seems positive in light of the previous finding from a review of 152 cluster randomised trials published from 1997 to 2000, which found that only 14% justified the use of a clustered design.8 In contrast, we found that only 50% reported clearly whether administrators or participants were blinded, and only 38% reported whether outcome assessors were blinded, whereas a previous review of 34 cluster randomised trials in primary care published in 2004 or 2005 found that 67% and 62% clearly reported whether participants or outcome assessors were blinded, respectively.7 Nevertheless, our findings indicate that the reporting of blinding of outcome assessment could be improving over time. This is encouraging as blinding plays an essential role in any assessment of internal validity or risk of bias, or both. Intriguingly, reporting of blinding might be superior in cluster randomised trials than in individually randomised trials; a recent review of 144 trials from 55 high impact factor (median 7.67) journals found that only 25% adequately reported blinding.31

About 40% of the trials in our review that reported a sample size calculation failed to account for clustering, while 30% failed to account for clustering in the analysis. Improvement over time in these crucial aspects was suggested by a previous review that assessed 18 trials12 published from 1983 to 2003 and was also observed in an (unpublished) overview of methodological reviews that assessed the quality of cluster randomised trials published from 1973 to 2008.32 Still, inappropriate analytical methods that inflate the risk of type 1 and type 2 error remain common in cluster randomised trials in various clinical specialties.5 6 7 8 13 14 15

We found that only 86% of trials allocated a minimum of four clusters to each arm of the study. Past reviews of 152 cluster randomised trials in primary care and 60 trials in public health found that 91%8 and 92%6 of trials, respectively, met this criterion, but a review of 75 cluster randomised trials in cancer care found that only 67% had sufficient numbers of clusters per arm.5 This might reflect the challenge of recruiting clusters rather than individuals, but the ability to make valid inferences regarding intervention effects in studies with few clusters is severely compromised. When further recruitment is impossible, investigators should consider other design options.33 The reviews focusing on public health and on cancer trials each found 5% of studies allocated only one cluster per arm. In our study, 10 trials (3%) had only one cluster per arm. Investigators should recognise that in trials with only one cluster per arm, the intervention effect is completely confounded by the cluster effect.

Low numbers of clusters increase the likelihood of cluster level differences between study arms. Furthermore, clustering itself can make it difficult to achieve balance across arms for individual level variables when only simple randomisation is used to allocate clusters.34 In our review, 41% of the trials used simple randomisation rather than an allocation technique more likely to achieve balance at baseline. Previous reviews found that trials used simple randomisation rather than stratification or matching techniques 40%5 to 46%8 of the time. The CONSORT extension for cluster randomised trials warns against the risk of baseline imbalance from use of simple randomisation,19 and, although matching could overcome this problem, it leads to difficulties in estimating intracluster correlations and can complicate analyses.10 Although we did not actually assess for imbalance at baseline, one previous review found that three of 36 cluster randomised trials published in the BMJ, Lancet, and New England Journal of Medicine from 1997 to 2002 had evidence for cluster imbalance, while in 15 the adequacy of balance was deemed unclear.13 This indicates the need for investigators (and editors) to strongly consider the value of allocation techniques other than simple randomisation to achieve baseline balance in cluster randomised trials.35

Strengths and weaknesses of the study

Any study that does not consider the entire population could be susceptible to selection bias; it is plausible that different conclusions would be found by looking at a different sample. We mitigated this risk in our study by abstracting what is (to our knowledge) the largest ever sample of cluster randomised trials for a methodological review and the first to use a search strategy that aimed to produce a sample of cluster trials representative of all Medline publications. This search strategy had a sensitivity of 90%, meaning that the random sample used in this study was representative of most cluster randomised trials in health research published in Medline from 2000 to 2008. If the 10% of cluster randomised trials not identified by our search strategy were systematically different with respect to reporting or methodological quality, however, this could bias our results. In particular, as trials that are not clearly identified as “cluster randomised” in titles and abstracts of reports might also be less likely to adhere to recommended methodological and reporting standards, our results might overestimate the proportion of trials adhering to these standards. Although the sample was large relative to previous methodological reviews, it was determined by the objectives of the larger study focusing on ethical issues in cluster trials and we were therefore not specifically powered to detect small improvements in reporting. In particular, assuming the most conservative estimate of adherence of 50% before CONSORT, improvements to 60% and 70% adherence after CONSORT (2005-6 and 2007-8, respectively) would have been required to allow 80% probability of detecting a significant trend. Naturally, similar limitations extend to the secondary analyses involving subgroups defined by study or journal characteristics.

We used a unique summary score for adherence to 14 CONSORT based reporting variables relevant to cluster randomised trials. We believe this is helpful because it provides a sense of overall quality of reporting, but we do not intend to suggest by providing this score that each criterion is of equal importance. Although similar summary scores have been used before in other reviews of reporting standards,4 readers should note this caveat in addition to the other known limitations of quality scales.36 Furthermore, we acknowledge the risk of spurious findings associated with multiple testing in our analyses and recommend that significant results be interpreted cautiously. Finally, there are numerous criteria that we did not abstract in this review that could have important implications with respect to internal or external validity, such as baseline imbalances for clusters and participants, as well as risks of identification and recruitment bias. The extension to CONSORT for cluster randomised trials might have resulted in improvements in reporting for criteria other than those that we abstracted. It is also likely that the extension had a greater impact in journals that actively endorsed (and explicitly enforced) the guideline. Unfortunately, we were unable to evaluate this because of the difficulty in determining when CONSORT extensions were endorsed by each journal or how they were enforced.

Implications

Although we observed some improvement over time related to the publication of the CONSORT extension, we found an ongoing need for attention to the proper reporting and methodological conduct in cluster randomised trials. As the extension to CONSORT for cluster randomised trials was published in a general medical journal, investigators conducting trials in non-clinical settings or publishing in other journal categories (such as public health journals) might not have been aware of the extension, thus leading to the relatively poorer performance observed in this group. The most recent CONSORT guidelines for individual level randomised controlled trials were published in a wide range of clinical journals. Future updates for the CONSORT extension to cluster trials should consider a similar (or even broader) approach.

The slow uptake of guidelines into practice is a problem that extends beyond the clinic and into the realm of publication. It seems likely that more than the publication of the CONSORT guideline is required to assist editors and investigators in proper conduct and reporting of cluster randomised trials. Improved collaboration with guideline developers and new tools to support the efforts of editors and investigators should be made available to support the publication of more transparent and higher quality cluster randomised trial manuscripts.

What is already known on this topic

  • Previous methodological reviews have noted poor reporting of cluster randomised trials and have also found that the methods used often fail to properly account for the clustered nature of the data

  • An extension to the consolidated standards of reporting trials (CONSORT) specific for cluster randomised trials was published in 2004

What this study adds

  • Reporting and methodological conduct of cluster randomised trials remains suboptimal

  • The extension to CONSORT for cluster randomised trials led to some improvements in reporting but not in methodological conduct

  • More than guidelines/checklists are needed to support investigators and editors in publishing cluster randomised trials that provide adequate information to properly assess internal and external validity

Notes

Cite this as: BMJ 2011;343:d5886

Footnotes

  • We thank the editors as well as the reviewers, Sandra Eldridge and Carol Coupland, for their insightful comments, which have led to substantial improvements on an earlier version of this manuscript.

  • Contributors: NMI, MT, CW, JMG, JCB, MPE, AD, ZS, and RFB contributed to the conception and design of the study. NMI drafted the article and is guarantor. MT conducted the analysis of the data. All authors contributed to the interpretation of the data, commented on the first draft, revised the article critically for important intellectual content, and approved the final version. All authors had full access to all of the data (including statistical reports and tables) in the study and can take responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis.

  • Funding: This study was funded by operating grants MOP85066 and MOP89790 from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. The funding agency had no role in the study design, collection, analysis or interpretation of data, writing of the manuscript or in the decision to submit the manuscript for publication. NMI and AMcR both hold a fellowship award from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. JMG and CW both hold Canada Research Chairs.

  • Competing interests: All authors have completed the ICMJE uniform disclosure form at www.icmje.org/coi_disclosure.pdf (available on request from the corresponding author) and declare: no support from any organisation for the submitted work; no financial relationships with any organisations that might have an interest in the submitted work in the previous three years; no other relationships or activities that could appear to have influenced the submitted work.

  • Ethical approval: Not required.

  • Data sharing: Technical appendix, statistical code, and dataset are available from the corresponding author.

This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial License, which permits use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non commercial and is otherwise in compliance with the license. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/ and http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/legalcode.

References

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