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Comparative Study
. 2025 Apr;67(2):e70045.
doi: 10.1002/bimj.70045.

Two-Arm Crossover Randomized Controlled Trial Versus Meta-Analysis of N-of-1 Studies: Comparison of Statistical Efficiency in Determining an Intervention Effect

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Comparative Study

Two-Arm Crossover Randomized Controlled Trial Versus Meta-Analysis of N-of-1 Studies: Comparison of Statistical Efficiency in Determining an Intervention Effect

Anna Eleonora Carrozzo et al. Biom J. 2025 Apr.

Abstract

N-of-1 trials are currently receiving broader attention in healthcare research when assessing the effectiveness of interventions. In contrast to the most commonly applied two-arm randomized controlled trial (RCT), in an N-of-1 design, the individual acts as their own control condition in the sense of a multiple crossover trial. N-of-1 trials can lead to a higher quality of patient by examining the effectiveness of an intervention at an individual level. Moreover, when a series of N-of-1 trials are properly aggregated, it becomes possible to detect an intervention effect at a population level. This work investigates whether a meta-analysis of summary data of a series of N-of-1 trials allows us to detect a statistically significant intervention effect with fewer participants than in a traditional, prospectively powered two-arm RCT and crossover design when evaluating a digital health intervention in cardiovascular care. After introducing these different analysis approaches, we compared the empirical properties in a simulation study both under the null hypothesis and with respect to power with different between-subject heterogeneity settings and in the presence of a carry-over effect. We further investigate the performance of a sequential aggregation procedure. In terms of simulated power, the threshold of 80% was achieved earlier for the aggregating procedure, requiring fewer participants.

Keywords: N‐of‐1 trials; comparative effectiveness; crossover Design; meta‐analysis; two‐arm randomized controlled trial.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

Figures

FIGURE 1
FIGURE 1
Rejection rates of the three methods for δ=0.15 for increasing sample sizes, with no carry‐over effect, for setting (a) homogeneity (τ=0), (b) weak heterogeneity τ=0.1, and (c). strong heterogeneity τ=0.5.
FIGURE 2
FIGURE 2
Rejection rates of the three methods for δ=0.15 for increasing sample sizes, with carry‐over effect, for setting (a) homogeneity (τ=0), (b) weak heterogeneity τ=0.1, and (c) strong heterogeneity τ=0.5.
FIGURE 3
FIGURE 3
Rejection rates of the three methods for fixed sample size n = 30 with increasing true treatment effect δ, without and with carry over effect, for setting (a) homogeneity (τ=0), (b) weak heterogeneity τ=0.1, and (c) strong heterogeneity τ=0.5.
FIGURE 4
FIGURE 4
Rejection rate of a cumulative meta‐analysis with a Bonferroni correction to detect a true treatment effect δ=0.15, τ=0.5, and with carry‐over effect.

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