The use of sequential multiple assignment randomized trials (SMARTs) in physical activity interventions: a systematic review.

IF 3.9 3区 医学 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES BMC Medical Research Methodology Pub Date : 2024-12-19 DOI:10.1186/s12874-024-02439-4
Aoife Whiston, K M Kidwell, S O'Reilly, C Walsh, J C Walsh, L Glynn, K Robinson, S Hayes
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Abstract

Background: Physical activity (PA) is often the cornerstone in risk-reduction interventions for the prevention and treatment of many chronic health conditions. PA interventions are inherently multi-dimensional and complex in nature. Thus, study designs used in the evaluation of PA interventions must be adaptive to intervention components and individual capacities. A Sequential Multiple Assignment Randomised Trial (SMART) is a factorial design in a sequential setting used to build effective adaptive interventions. SMARTs represent a relatively new design for PA intervention research. This systematic review aims to examine the state-of-the-art of SMARTs used to develop PA interventions, with a focus on study characteristics, design, and analyses.

Methods: PubMed, Embase, PsychINFO, CENTRAL, and CinAHL were systematically searched through May 2023 for studies wherein PA SMARTs were conducted. Methodological quality was assessed using the Cochrane Risk of Bias 2 Tool.

Results: Twenty studies across a variety of populations - e.g., obesity, chronic pain, and cardiovascular conditions, were included. All PA SMARTs involved two decision stages, with the majority including two initial treatment options. PA interventions most commonly consisted of individual aerobic exercise with strategies such as goal setting, wearable technology, and motivational interviewing also used to promote PA. Variation was observed across tailoring variables and timing of tailoring variables. Non-response strategies primarily involved augmenting and switching treatment options, and for responders to continue with initial treatment options. For analyses, most sample size estimations and outcome analyses accounted for the SMART aims specified. Techniques such as linear mixed models, weighted regressions, and Q-learning regression were frequently used. Risk of bias was high across the majority of included studies.

Conclusions: Individual-based aerobic exercise interventions supported by behaviour change techniques and wearable sensing technology may play a key role in the future development of SMARTs addressing PA intervention development. Clearer rationale for the selection of tailoring variables, timing of tailoring variables, and included measures is essential to advance PA SMART designs. Collaborative efforts from researchers, clinicians, and patients are needed in order to bridge the gap between adaptive research designs and personalised treatment pathways observed in clinical practice.

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在体育锻炼干预中使用连续多次分配随机试验(SMART):系统综述。
背景:身体活动(PA)往往是预防和治疗许多慢性健康状况的降低风险干预措施的基石。PA干预措施本质上是多维的和复杂的。因此,用于评估PA干预措施的研究设计必须适应干预成分和个人能力。顺序多任务随机试验(SMART)是在顺序设置中用于构建有效适应性干预措施的析因设计。smart代表了PA干预研究的一种相对较新的设计。本系统综述旨在研究用于开发PA干预措施的smart的最新技术,重点关注研究特征、设计和分析。方法:系统检索PubMed、Embase、PsychINFO、CENTRAL和CinAHL到2023年5月进行PA smart的研究。采用Cochrane风险偏倚2工具评估方法学质量。结果:20项研究涵盖了不同的人群,如肥胖、慢性疼痛和心血管疾病。所有的PA smart都涉及两个决策阶段,其中大多数包括两个初始治疗方案。PA干预最常见的是个体有氧运动,目标设定、可穿戴技术和动机性访谈等策略也用于促进PA。在裁剪变量和裁剪变量的时间上观察到差异。无反应策略主要包括增加和转换治疗方案,以及反应者继续使用最初的治疗方案。对于分析,大多数样本量估计和结果分析都说明了指定的SMART目标。经常使用线性混合模型、加权回归和q -学习回归等技术。在大多数纳入的研究中,偏倚风险很高。结论:在行为改变技术和可穿戴传感技术的支持下,基于个人的有氧运动干预可能在smart解决PA干预发展的未来发展中发挥关键作用。更清晰的选择裁剪变量的基本原理,裁剪变量的时间,包括措施是必不可少的,以推进PA SMART设计。为了弥合适应性研究设计与临床实践中观察到的个性化治疗途径之间的差距,需要研究人员、临床医生和患者的合作努力。
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来源期刊
BMC Medical Research Methodology
BMC Medical Research Methodology 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
2.50%
发文量
298
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: BMC Medical Research Methodology is an open access journal publishing original peer-reviewed research articles in methodological approaches to healthcare research. Articles on the methodology of epidemiological research, clinical trials and meta-analysis/systematic review are particularly encouraged, as are empirical studies of the associations between choice of methodology and study outcomes. BMC Medical Research Methodology does not aim to publish articles describing scientific methods or techniques: these should be directed to the BMC journal covering the relevant biomedical subject area.
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